One common gripe I have with many western cartoon portrayals of females is that they always have to have the female get in the last word. It's not annoying in and of itself, but it gets to be a cliche. Let me stage a familiar scene for you:
It's an action cartoon. A male and female lead are sparring with each other in practice. The male gets the upper hand and takes down the female. He'll say something along the lines of "Getting rusty!" or even something humourously pigheaded like "Can't beat a manly man!" etc,. Immediately after this, the male gets his comeuppance--the female whips out some awesome kung fu/judo takedown and she gets in the last wisecrack. This scene has been used countless times in Justice League, Batman The Animated Series, Spider-Man, and pretty much every superhero cartoon ever made.
Or the comedy cartoon variation of this: the male and female are in a "humourous" argument. The male gets in a little dig at the female or says something idiotic. The female then comes in with a wisecrack that sufficiently humbles the male.
I have two major problems with this cliche. The first is that the female is almost always right and therefore never TRULY humourous. The male often gets the idiotic line and gets the comeuppance which brings the REAL laughs, but the female lead is NEVER allowed to look bad, not even momentarily for a joke.
The other problem is that it boils these scenes down to gender wars. Now, I have no problem with gender TENSION. Men and women are different, so there should always be some sort of tension there in their interactions, even the most relaxed ones. Since these scenes essentially boil down to the woman always being right it's basically just a pointless way for the writers to throw a "you GO GIRL" cookie to the female lead. It's lazy and unnecessary and when several variations of these scenes add up in the course of one episode (I only described two common ones, there are thousands of others) it becomes exactly the feminist politics that people complain about in cartoons with female leads.
I'll say, the only show in recent memory that seemed to consistently allow the female lead to be the comedy relief (and therefore be subject to "losing" as one might call it) is King of the Hill. Of course, some people might say it's just because of KOTH's republican politics, but I am not going to go there.
It's an action cartoon. A male and female lead are sparring with each other in practice. The male gets the upper hand and takes down the female. He'll say something along the lines of "Getting rusty!" or even something humourously pigheaded like "Can't beat a manly man!" etc,. Immediately after this, the male gets his comeuppance--the female whips out some awesome kung fu/judo takedown and she gets in the last wisecrack. This scene has been used countless times in Justice League, Batman The Animated Series, Spider-Man, and pretty much every superhero cartoon ever made.
Or the comedy cartoon variation of this: the male and female are in a "humourous" argument. The male gets in a little dig at the female or says something idiotic. The female then comes in with a wisecrack that sufficiently humbles the male.
I have two major problems with this cliche. The first is that the female is almost always right and therefore never TRULY humourous. The male often gets the idiotic line and gets the comeuppance which brings the REAL laughs, but the female lead is NEVER allowed to look bad, not even momentarily for a joke.
The other problem is that it boils these scenes down to gender wars. Now, I have no problem with gender TENSION. Men and women are different, so there should always be some sort of tension there in their interactions, even the most relaxed ones. Since these scenes essentially boil down to the woman always being right it's basically just a pointless way for the writers to throw a "you GO GIRL" cookie to the female lead. It's lazy and unnecessary and when several variations of these scenes add up in the course of one episode (I only described two common ones, there are thousands of others) it becomes exactly the feminist politics that people complain about in cartoons with female leads.
I'll say, the only show in recent memory that seemed to consistently allow the female lead to be the comedy relief (and therefore be subject to "losing" as one might call it) is King of the Hill. Of course, some people might say it's just because of KOTH's republican politics, but I am not going to go there.
