Перейти к содержанию

Pretty Female Lead — I Feel

At first glance, the premise of the 2018 comedy I Feel Pretty sounds like a classic, if problematic, Hollywood body-swap fantasy. Amy Schumer plays Renee Bennett, a woman deeply insecure about her conventional looks, who hits her head during a SoulCycle class and wakes up believing she has transformed into a supermodel. The obvious twist—which the audience sees immediately—is that nothing has changed physically. The film’s tension hinges on a simple question: What happens when an “average” woman walks through the world with the unshakable confidence of a Victoria’s Secret angel?

But I Feel Pretty refuses. Renee does not get a physical transformation. Instead, she is forced to do something far harder: she must walk onto a stage, in front of hundreds of people, and deliver a speech about beauty without the crutch of her imagined hotness. She stumbles. She sweats. She admits she is terrified. And then she says something extraordinary: “I thought I needed to look a certain way, but I don’t. I just need to be brave.” i feel pretty female lead

The speech is not a victory lap. It is messy, tearful, and real. Renee does not become a supermodel; she becomes a person . The film’s final shots show her dancing in the street, not because she thinks she is beautiful, but because she has stopped caring whether she is. The delusion was the training wheels. The reality is the ride. I Feel Pretty works not despite its absurd premise but because of it. Renee Bennett is a hero for an age of curated Instagram feeds and filter dysmorphia. She teaches us that waiting to feel confident until you meet some external standard is a fool’s errand—because the goalposts will always move. Her journey from the basement to the boardroom is not a story about learning to love your cellulite. It is a story about learning to forget it. At first glance, the premise of the 2018

×
×
  • Создать...