In
many ways the film criticizes the idea of the "romantic comedy".
When we think of what a romantic comedy is in our society, we usually
picture a stereotypical set up: a young good looking, successful, strong guy
meets a young attractive girl. The two begin dating, but in the end, they
both resolve any problem they have between them, and they live happily ever
after together. The entire movie in itself rejects the idea of the stereotypical
romantic comedy simply because Alvey and Annie don't end up together in the end
(even though we secretly wish they would because that's what we expect).
One of the major aspects that Woody Allen uses to criticize the
romantic comedy in the film is sex. At the
very beginning of the film we see Alvey reject Allison’s sexual advances
towards him. This stems away from what
would normally be a romantic comedy because usually the male and female
character are supposed to love each other and engage in sex all the time, so
especially to have the man turn down sex goes against the norm. Another important scene is when Alvey wants
to have sex with Annie, but she leaves her body because she does not want to
have sex with him. This criticizes the
romantic comedy by showing how men are so stereotypical and don’t care about
the emotions of a woman. Annie even says
in this scene to Alvey that “at least [he has her] body”.
Gender roles in this film are not
black and white, as people typically perceive them in the romantic comedy where
the man is strong, and the female is a damsel in distress type. One the one hand, Allen supports gender roles
and the notorious wine-drinking scene between Annie and Alvey when they first
meet. As we hear what each character is
saying and we see what each character is really thinking, it plays into the
stereotype. The man is merely thinking
about the girl naked and the girl is nervous and overthinks too much to try to
impress the guy. For the most part,
though, Allen completely goes against gender roles. One thing that is noticeable is that even the
way Annie dresses from the beginning is extremely androgynous. She often wears business shirts with their
collars popped, and she usually ties a scarf around her neck, which looks very
similar to a male tie. The major scene
we see this gender switch, however, is when Annie has to catch the lobsters
because Alvey is too afraid to.
Ultimately in the movie, Woody Allen never clearly defines gender, as we
would typically see it in a romantic comedy because in real life there are no
specific gender roles among people.
There can be many theories of love
from the movie, but one thing that I concluded is that there will always be a
complete disconnect between people.
There will always be dueling wants, desires, thoughts, and opinions
between people, which is what makes love nearly impossible especially for Annie
and Alvey. We even see this with Alvey’s
parents when they argue over the maid who stole from them. They both have different opinions on how to
deal with it, which just over dramatizes the disconnection between people. Alvey closes the movie with the chicken and
egg quote. This relates back to the
disconnection: one person will be one way, and the other person will think that
they’re crazy for being that way. We see
this simply when Annie wants to move to Los Angeles and Alvey hates it. I think ultimately, Allen’s theory is that
two people can never truly come together simply because they will always be two
separate people.
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