A night with Barbie (and Ken)

Social rum-rum claims that men, boys, according to the hardened barmaids, should watch Barbie, it is supposed to reflect, reinvent themselves and overthrow the patriarchy.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
30 July 2023 Sunday 04:51
18 Reads
A night with Barbie (and Ken)

Social rum-rum claims that men, boys, according to the hardened barmaids, should watch Barbie, it is supposed to reflect, reinvent themselves and overthrow the patriarchy.

I, the truth, didn't have them all, but when I saw the full room the day before yesterday Saturday in the empty Barcelona, ​​I felt empathetic with the seventh art, even if it was in a front row seat. And now we go to the spoiler, from brother-in-law to brother-in-law.

While I was puffing on popcorn - and I assumed it would be dinner, but then, halfway through the classic, I decided to have something light for dinner and opened a Kraft herb terrine, which I finished with not to be depressed after a few days seeing the leftovers in the fridge – the film immersed me in a pink atmosphere. The pink was splashing across the screen and I thought: where are you going with a red Lacoste, you look like a fan of red!

The actors in the film are very good - still lucky! - and occasionally sing cheerfully, between meritorious and colorful choreographies. In a distraction, El Fary, detractor of the soft man, crossed my mind, but I quickly erased the bad thoughts.

Barbie has a message, although I doubt if I understood it correctly and if the fact that it has a message exempts it from superficiality. I also thought I should have bought a bottle of water to go with the popcorn and not get thirsty.

The film runs through the relevant courses, all very L.A. (Los Angeles, state of California, for Gratallops readers) and it's a hit, although I don't know if it will work well in Bangladesh, where there are a lot of going to the cinemas, with the colorful posters on the facade, but more than Bollywood and the escapist genre. The only time I was there, I couldn't go to the cinema because the courses of the Ganges had left my mother - without wanting to offend the mothers - and I had to write about the thousands of drowned people.

Men of the 20th century: one comes out of the cinema unscathed. And what's more, it reminds me so much of Los chicos con las chicas!, the catchy and prehistoric theme of Los Bravos (1967), with a lyric that already anticipated this Barbie: "Los chicos con las chicas tienen que estar y todos juntos cantar".