Date Rape Scene?


Anyone else go wtf when the main guy says his hot girlfriend is passed out drunk upstairs and he could violate her 100 different ways, but his heart wasn't in it this time? And then later he gives the nerdy kid permission to do it? Pretty messed up that this was supposed to be the hero of the movie, but also that back then if a woman was unconscious it was considered consent.

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That scene has always made me super uncomfortable.

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https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/UnfortunateImplications

http://www.salon.com/2009/08/11/16_candles/

Salon.com was critical of the sexual politics of the films of John Hughes in an article they wrote shortly after his death in 2009. In Sixteen Candles, the male lead casually jokes about raping the Alpha Bitch while she's drunk; he doesn't do this, but the Alpha Bitch and the local nerd have a sexual encounter of Questionable Consent later on which is treated as okay because she liked it. Both the male characters here are supposed to be sympathetic. As well, in Ferris Bueller's Day Off, the character Cameron pretends to be unconscious at one point so he can watch his best friend's girlfriend naked.

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Date rape wasn't taken seriously back then at all. There is an episode of Facts Of Life I think the first season where Blair is almost raped by a guy in his van. She comes home and tells Mrs. Garrett what happened and that's it. No report made or anything. It's almost like since Blair is a pretty girl it's accepted.

I'm a survivor of rape and in rape support groups up until about 10yrs ago many women who were date raped didn't believe it counted as rape. They felt since they agreed to go out with the guy it was their fault and it wasn't reported. This is very common and I still meet women who say "but it was date rape." It's not the same.

Rape is rape. Even if you are drunk or say no or don't just once. It's rape and the emotional pain of it can follow you for life.

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"Rape is rape"

No, it's not.

If I have sex with a woman who is drunk and consents, or who says no at first but consents if I cajole her, it's not the same as if I hide in the bushes, grab some woman, beat her, tie her, threaten her with a knife or gun, and fuck her while she cries hysterically and pleads with me.

If you can't distinguish between these vastly different acts, you are a very dim bulb. You probably think "Baby It's Cold Outside" is a rape song.

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Modern feminism allows for multiple interpretations of rape in effort to further control men.

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[deleted]

Hated the scene and him for allowing a stranger to take his intoxicated girlfriend home.

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He wasn't giving the nerdy kid permission to do it he was giving him permission to take her home. He wasn't expecting anything to happen between them. He said he "could" violate her 100 different ways not that he has in the past or will, he was making the point he could because she's always passed out from partying. You guys are funny. I like your level of understanding. Lol

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[deleted]

It was 10 different ways not 100.

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He "could" also kill her. But no one's saying it'd be alright for him to SAY that even if he's never DONE it

In other words, it doesn't matter that he's never violated her unconscious form before. The mere fact that he even considered it an option says a lot about the attitude of the time and how different (thankfully) things are now

Back then, Jake would actually have been seen as a "good guy" for acknowledging that he COULD rape her, but gallantly chose not to

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Exactly. He "could" sign her up for the Columbia record and tape club, but he didn't. He was a good person.

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NOT funny

*I* was signed up for that damn club. Took me MONTHS to get off the damn thing

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Seriously, LMAO!! Thank you!!

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> main guy says his hot girlfriend is passed out drunk upstairs and he could violate her 100 different ways, but his heart wasn't in it this time?

First off, he doesn't say, "this time." The scene doesn't at all imply that he has violated her like that in the past or that he is even interested in it. Okay, perhaps he has, but this scene does not indicate that; it indicates that he's actually a respectable guy.

But, let's say -- for the sake of argument -- that he has raped her like this in the past. Okay, that's bad. But, we have to think that Caroline realized what had happened when she woke up the next morning and she didn't press charges.

And now, she's putting herself in exactly the same situation by getting drunk and passing out in his bed. That's gotta count as consent on some level. Caroline's a smart cookie and she wouldn't be taking such a risk unless she was okay with it.

> also that back then if a woman was unconscious it was considered consent.

No. Unconsciousness has never implied consent -- by itself. It's making the same mistake twice that implies consent.

--
What Would Jesus Do For A Klondike Bar (WWJDFAKB)?

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No. Unconsciousness has never implied consent -- by itself. It's making the same mistake twice that implies consent.


Not only did you shoot your argument in the foot with this last bit, but I think you blew off several toes in the process.

'Remember when' is the lowest form of conversation. - Tony Soprano

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No. My point is as strong as ever. Anyone that makes the same mistake twice deserves the consequences.

--
What Would Jesus Do For A Klondike Bar (WWJDFAKB)?

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So how do you account for Americans making the same mistake of voting for democrats or republicans over and over?

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Its really scare me!!!
It was a date rape and it was super normal back in a day..

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Yeah, but Caroline was no saint either. She ends up raping Farmer Ted and taking his virginity while he was incapacitated in the back of the Rolls and everyone gives her a pass.

One of those films we shouldn't take seriously.

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Better yet, any movie that claims to be a work of fiction should not be taken seriously.

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Spoilsport..

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