MovieChat Forums > Trading Places (1983) Discussion > Can Millennials handle a great movie lik...

Can Millennials handle a great movie like this?


Without being offend?

The IMDB message boards you either die a good poster,or live long enough to become the troll

reply

Actually, I get the impression millennials can potentially handle it better than older people. To me it feels like the baby boomers are the ones constantly back tracking on their generation's best work and apologizing for not being "sensitive enough." I suppose they don't want to feel out of touch. But young people don't have that hang up, and can recognize that a movie like Trading Places was actually pretty pioneering in how it used humor to comment on the growing pains of race and class relations.

Not all millennials of course, and not all boomers are back tracking either. But it is a trend I'm noticing.

“My life has been full of terrible misfortunes – most of which never happened.”

reply

[deleted]

They "don't get offended as easy"? Whenever I see someone whining about something being insulting (or racist, or victim blaming, or sexist, or misogynist, or whatever), they're inevitably either a millennial, or a leftist. Most often, both. They whine and whine and whine like a damn Whinegizer bunny, being obnoxious, demanding the whole world to be a "safe space".

And the worst thing, they're getting offended about stuff that doesn't concern them at all. They're getting offended in proxy. Try writing about "African savages" or "Papuan cannibals" somewhere on the internet, and in a moment, there will be bunch of pampered, pasty-white millennial kids jumping up and down your back shouting "racism!" and demanding you apologize.

reply

Sure, people who do that tend to be millennials, but that doesn't mean most millennials are like that.

reply

[deleted]

I'm a millennial & this is my favorite movie.

reply

Prove it it poof!

reply

I was born in 1983 and it's my favorite movie.

I don't know what else to say to you. *shrugs*

reply

The real question is, "Would they enjoy Blazing Saddles?"

reply

I was born in 1989 and I enjoy Trading Places and Blazing Saddles.

reply

[deleted]

Can Millennials handle a great movie like this?


Some can, sure. But in general, no. This is the most pussy whipped generation to ever tread between our two great coasts.

reply

at least 50% of what i read on this board is
"i hate this modern pc rubbish"
"why it gone all soflty soflty"
"millenials are snowflakes , "
"another reboot with women / blacks /midgets in it"
"Leftys!" (i h8 that one)

So it seems the most bitching whining and complaining is done by those that are claiming to be old school / stoic / broad minded / i can take it / Dennis Leary / George Carlin types.

I have yet to see a snowflake complaining there was too much swearing in a film , or not enough diversity.

reply

Myopia is a hell of a drug!

reply

Nope just read the blackface posts here. Sad theyre missing a great comedy!

reply

I'm offended by the old time blackface routines which were meant either to demean us or to give a white guy the acting job instead.

The blackface used by Akroyd in this context is NOT offensive, nor is Neil Diamond's blackface in The Jazz Singer.

In both these instances, the blackface is a disguise to prevent recognition. Context (like in every situation) is crucial. Love this film.. all of it.

reply

Sadly, most people today, regardless of their generation, don't have a clue about context.

(Gene Wilder has a similar scene in Silver Streak, btw)

reply

Older people I know don't worry about the type of humor in "Trading Places". People I know who were born in the 1980s or later refuse to laugh, then leave the room and won't talk about it. I wish I was acquainted with some of the young people who aren't uptight about stuff like this.

reply