![]() Another taking advantage of a woman's grief to sleep with her even as he sympathizes with her. We've got a guy who takes advantage of his amputee status to manipulate women into sleeping with him. Does it (in its cinematic form) amount to a coherent thesis on how feminism has affected men (that this is the purpose of the interviews is not revealed until the last minute of the film, so my asking this is a spoiler, but I can't see how knowing this would matter much to a viewer)? No, not that I can glean. Is it amusing to see numerous comic actors give monologues that display keenly that self-consciousness-philosophical reflection-does not guarantee virtue? Yes. ![]() from "The Office" from the novel by David Foster Wallace, which I've not read. Entirely relevant to our feminism episode is this film directed/adapted by John K. ![]()
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