As an avid fan of anime, cartoons in general, and movies, I have always been fascinated by the question of how the things we watched as kids shaped us into our adult selves and what the things we watch as adults have to say about us as people. So this is going to be my weekly foray into movies and shows, animated or just leaning geeky.
For this weekend I'm going to talk about a popular movie trope in respect, specifically, to the illustrious Ramona Flowers of Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World. Ramona's character is what as known as the Manic Pixie Dream Girl. To quote the ever present Wikipedia:
"The Manic Pixie Dream Girl (MPDG) is a stock character in films. Film critic Nathan Rabin, who coined the term after seeing Kirsten Dunst in Elizabethtown (2005), describes the MPDG as 'that bubbly, shallow cinematic creature that exists solely in the fevered imagination of sensitive writer-directors to teach broodingly soulful young men to embrace life and its infinite mysteries and adventures.' MPDGs are said to help their men without pursuing their own happiness, and such character never grow up, this their men never grow up."
Now of course Ramona isn't exactly bubbly, she's more a sub genre of the MPDG. She's the mysterious, inaccessibly cool counter culture chick, the one with wild hair colors (which she seems to change ever other week), possibly piercings and tattoos, and her own unique style of dress with interesting color choices and articles that seem to have been thrown together from the bottom of her closet at the last possible second before she raced out of the door. She's the girl who has a constantly bored look on her face, seems to be above the fray, and looks as if she could genuinely care less what anyone thought of her. Something about her draws every nerd, geek, and outcast shy boy type within a 50 mile radius like the call of a siren.
So what about this character speaks to me? Why do I identify with her in so many ways?
Well the answer is in the focus of the movie itself. It is, after all, Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World. Scott is our hero and main character, and in finding and falling for Ramona, it's his adventure, fighting her evil ex's that brings us to the final battle where Scott earns the power of true love and, subsequently, earns the power of self respect. Ramona, sadly, remains merely a muse for Scott's self actualization.
Until now I've been the steady backup to the man in my life. I've been fiercely loyal, constantly supportive, always seeing the potential in my partners and encouraging their growth, inspiring their love and obsession, but what happens time and time again is that I, like Ramona, fade into the background and become an accessory rather than a active participant in my own adventure. Ramona, unlike Scott, never earns the power of self respect, she merely becomes the sidekick of yet another future evil ex. Though I'd like to give Scott more credit than that and hope that he at least ends up being the guy to break that chain, but that is exactly the point. The chain of evil ex's is not something that happened to Ramona and now follows her around, it's something that she cultivated through her own flaky, flighty attention span and indecision.
So while Ramona is interesting, alluring, and mysterious, the real mystery is her inner life and motivations because as so many MPDG's, she seems not to actually have any. The leg up that I have on Ramona is that I do have a rather interesting and complicated inner life, but I've been ignoring it and putting my own motivations on the back burner in order to help other people find themselves.
But how well could I really have been helping anyone being so lost myself?
It's time to break out of the trope. Time to drop the Manic Pixie and simply become a Dream Girl, not for someone else, but for me.