By Joshua Caldwell
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August 17, 2023
“Ken is the REAL Villain of Barbie” “Mattel’s CEO was villainized and people now LOVE Mattel” I’ve been toiling with what I wanted to write about this movie, that hasn’t already been said, and I’ve read a few reviews that oscillate between the above two concepts. Within the prototypical story structure we have hero and villain. Especially for the Western Audience. What Gerwin and Baumbach do so deftly here is steer both characters in and out of that role, because Gosling’s Ken and Ferrel’s CEO are not the villains. Patriarchy is. How the CEO and Ken present are amalgams; ciphers for the ways that a codified oppressive system, in this case patriarchy, affect an individual and how that individual may react. These characters then exhibit the various ways we can codify oppression overtly and covertly. An apt way to look at the dispersion of oppression, and how it manifests. An oppressive chaos theory. Honestly, I thought Farrell’s portrayal of the Corporate Ally was spot on. They {Farrell} often come off cartoonish, but if the billionaires of the world have shown anything, it’s that cartoonish may be too kind. Everyone touched by Patriarchy, whether in reality or Ken-dome eventually suffers. Everyone can oscillate in and out of being a villain in a system that codifies oppression.