|
"ΕΝΗΜΕΡΩΤΗΣ"

ΔΗΜΟΣΙΕΥΜΑ Νο
[
04339
]
[
2017.07.19 00:00
]
MILO YIANNOPOULOS: CASSIE JAYE’S THE RED PILL: THE MOVIE STRIKING
FEAR INTO THE HEARTS OF FEMINISTS
Cassie Jaye’s The Red Pill: The Movie Striking Fear Into The
Hearts Of Feminists


by Milo 8 Oct 2016
In real
life, radical feminism is a collection of squabbling tribes
populated by bitter women intent on proving themselves the biggest
victim in order to enlarge their slice of the victim economy.
But if you imagine, as I sometimes do, a secret feminist command
bunker, there is a war room somewhere in Portland today with
a vagina-shaped table surrounded by all the leading feminists
arguing how to save their movement.
They are not, for once, arguing over that table about me, the
supervillain of the Internet. They are instead scrambling to
stop Cassie Jaye, a filmmaker whose documentary on the men’s
rights movement called
The Red
Pill
was premiered tonight in New York.
Today, feminists are getting ulcers not from their horrific
diets, but from a self-identified feminist who has serious bona
fides both as a filmmaker and a friend to lefty causes like
marriage equality. This is the type of woman who liberals typically
would fall over themselves to praise with compliments like brave
and stunning.
But they won’t be so complimentary this time, because Jaye has
made a film on a topic feminism doesn’t want the public to hear
about, and she has done it fairly, which means feminism can’t
afford for anyone, most especially women, to see it.
The Red Pill sets out to explore the men’s rights movement through
interviews with MRA leaders like Paul Elam, feminists that oppose
the movement, video footage of events and graphics and animations
highlighting particular issues. Although many were skeptical
of Jaye’s ability to fairly represent men’s rights activists,
she has, I think, succeeded.
Jaye’s budget ended up directly on screen. Her style keeps things
visually interesting when they could otherwise turn boring quickly.
I was impressed by the graphics she uses, which become especially
devastating as the hate-facts on topics such as military deaths
start rolling.
The graphics in this documentary are some of the most visually
appealing anti-feminist images I’ve ever seen, outside of my
own YouTube channel of course and that of the Factual Feminist,
Christina Hoff Sommers.
This is a film that made me feel a variety of emotions, and
that is no mean feat when the viewer’s heart is as cold and
black as mine. You can expect to find humor at various points,
become angry at feminists assaulting police officers and pulling
fire alarms and disgust at the holier-than-thou pronouncements
from academics and activists.
One of my staff members, a father of two, reported tearing up
at one interviewee’s description of the struggles he went through
in family court and the toll the process had on both his health
and his son’s health. The story is anecdotal, but anecdotes
humanize the subject in a way statistics never can.
This is not a movie short on statistics by the way, they are
discussed in detail and shown on the screen throughout.
The other emotion I experienced was horror at numerous short
scenes of Jaye driving around. I had to peek through my fingers
expecting a crash at any moment. I freely recognize this is
a personal hangup, not everyone shares my well-known fear of
femsteering.
Jaye’s interview style is to focus on the thoughts of her subject,
and then to comment on what they’ve said afterwards in voiceover.
I found it to be effective, but there were times with both feminists
and MRAs where I wished she was more confrontational during
the interview.
Another device she uses effectively is to insert her own video
journals into the documentary in order to chronicle her reactions
to what she has learned. I found these interesting and felt
that Jaye was sincerely sharing her opinions and emotions. The
Red Pill includes some snippets of her acting at the beginning,
and with all due respect I don’t think she has the chops to
fake these journals.
The video journals add a secondary plot to The Red Pill: the
red-pilling of Cassie Jaye herself. Unfortunately these journals
seem to disappear in the latter part of the movie and this thread
is not as fully realised as it could be.
The Red Pill includes interviews with a variety of activists
on both sides of the men’s rights debate. Some of the interviewees
are impressive both in their appearance and in their material.
Others are a bit harder to watch.
My chief complaint about The Red Pill is that almost all of
the men’s rights activists interviewed are older men. The casual
viewer might come away thinking that MRAs are all middle-aged.
Why is there almost no representation of younger men, who face
their own unique challenges?
I’d love to have seen Jaye interview a man kicked out of a school
by a kangaroo court because a female student regretted a consensual
sexual encounter. As readers of my work will know, I’ve chronicled
the increasing problems faced by younger men in pieces like
the
Sexodus.
The film includes an interview with the infamous “Big Red,”
an angry Canadian feminist notable primarily for looking like
the love child of a bad Canadian Michael Jackson impersonator
and Elmo from Sesame Street. I would have thought it a good
opportunity to counterpoint her with a young MRA.
But my gripes are minor. The Red Pill is a powerful film on
a complicated, important, yet woefully unaddressed issue. I
applaud Jaye for having the intestinal fortitude to not only
tackle this subject, but to do so fairly. After all, it would
have been much easier to produce a documentary on how wonderful
feminism is and how stunningly brave Emma Watson is for fighting
the horrors of being called bossy as a child.
I’m not going to give away any more of The Red Pill because
you need to watch it yourself. I will point out my favorite
part, which is Karen Straughan blowing feminism out of the room
by illustrating the horrors of Boko Haram before “Bring back
our girls” became a liberal clarion call.
I found it delightful that Karen was interviewed in a noisy
bar: talk about a perfect setting. I can tell you this — everyone
concerned about men’s rights should thank God that Karen Straughan
is on your side.
There is another theme teased out by The Red Pill, which is
that feminists will always, always try to shut down those who
disagree with them. Two interviewees describe this explicitly:
Erin Pizzey, who opened shelters for both men and women, is
not welcome at the very shelters she founded, because her views
are not politically correct.
Warren Farrell describes a similar experience: as his interests
changed from women’s rights to men’s rights, his speaking engagements
and other projects simply dried up.
Jaye is herself an example of this phenomenon. The picture was
almost not made
due to lack of funding. It was only after I covered Jaye here
at Breitbart that it was funded
well above its target.
I am pleased to report that Milo fans, Mike Cernovich and the
wider men’s rights movement did not fund the project in vain.
The Red Pill does not yet have a digital distribution deal,
but you can keep an eye on the website for ways to
see the film.
While you wait, enjoy the wave of feminist harpies attempting
to tear it apart. There is already a review from The Village
Voice which apologizes for ‘taking the bait’ by reviewing The
Red Pill.
Who are they fooling? They wake up every morning with the sole
aim of being offended.
My message to Cassie Jaye is a simple one: buckle up and prepare
for every slimy outlet in the mainstream media (which is most
of them) to come after you. You’ve done the unthinkable. You’ve
made a fair-minded documentary about feminism’s most hated target.
As always, hatred from the mainstream media is the best advertising
one could hope for, especially with the group that could gain
the most from The Red Pill, young men and women who distrust
the media and are witnessing the fall-out of radical feminism
on America’s campuses on a daily basis.
Madeleine Albright infamously said, “There is a special place
in hell for women that don’t help women”, and if that’s true,
The Red Pill has earned Cassie Jaye her own spot there. On the
bright side, she will have women like Karen Straughan to hang
out with. And me, I’m sure. I’m looking forward to our infernally
fabulous brunch dates.
Follow
Milo Yiannopoulos
(@Nero)
on
Facebook,
Instagram
and
Snapchat.
Hear him every Friday on
The Milo Yiannopoulos Show.
Write to Milo at
milo@breitbart.com.
READ
MORE STORIES ABOUT:
Milo,
Tech,
Cassie Jaye,
feminism,
Men's Rights,
The Red Pill
ΠΗΓΗ:
http://www.breitbart.com/milo/2016/10/08/the-red-pill-cassie-jayes-movie-that-feminists-cant-afford-women-watching/

ΣΧΕΤΙΚΑ ΔΗΜΟΣΙΕΥΜΑΤΑ ΤΟΥ [ΠΑ.ΣΥ.Α.]
"ΕΝΗΜΕΡΩΤΗΣ"

ΔΗΜΟΣΙΕΥΜΑ Νο [
04274
] [ 2017.05.19 00:00 ]
"YOU TUBE" - "CASSIE JAYE": THE RED PILL (2017) - MOVIE TRAILER

"ΕΝΗΜΕΡΩΤΗΣ"

ΔΗΜΟΣΙΕΥΜΑ Νο [
04275
] [ 2017.05.20 00:00 ]
"WIKIPEDIA": "THE RED PILL" - CASSIE JAYE'S 2016 DOCUMENTARY
MOVIE FOR THE MEN’S RIGHTS MOVEMENT

"ΕΝΗΜΕΡΩΤΗΣ"

ΔΗΜΟΣΙΕΥΜΑ Νο [
04284
] [ 2017.05.25 00:00 ]
BLOG "THE UNKNOWN HISTORY OF MISANDRY": The Documentary Film
that was Banned BEFORE Post-Production Even Began – THE RED
PILL

"ΕΝΗΜΕΡΩΤΗΣ"

ΔΗΜΟΣΙΕΥΜΑ Νο [
04294
] [ 2017.06.04 00:00 ]
THE RED PILL - A CASSIE JAYE DOCUMENTARY - THE OFFICIAL SITE
- http://theredpillmovie.com/

"ΕΝΗΜΕΡΩΤΗΣ"

ΔΗΜΟΣΙΕΥΜΑ Νο [
04296
] [ 2017.06.06 00:00 ]
"THE RED PILL" CASSIE JAYE DOCUMENTARY PREMIERED AT A LITTLE
ART HOUSE THEATRE CALLED CINEMA VILLAGE IN NEW YORK CITY ON
OCTOBER 7th 2016 - The Red Pill (documentary) World Premiere
Q&A - Oct 7, 2016

"ΕΝΗΜΕΡΩΤΗΣ"

ΔΗΜΟΣΙΕΥΜΑ Νο [
04302
] [ 2017.06.12 00:00 ]
"A VOICE FOR MEN" - CASSIE JAYE - "THE RED PILL" DOCUMENTARY
PREMIERED AT A LITTLE ART HOUSE THEATRE CALLED CINEMA VILLAGE
IN NEW YORK CITY ON OCTOBER 7TH, 2016

"ΕΝΗΜΕΡΩΤΗΣ"

ΔΗΜΟΣΙΕΥΜΑ Νο [
04337
] [ 2017.07.17 00:00 ]
"YOU TUBE" - "AN EAR FOR MEN": THE RED PILL MOVIE REVIEW


        
|