Some of the costumes worn
by female characters show a little skin, but my feeling is that calling it «partial nudity» is stretching it a bit, and alcohol is a non-issue.
Not exact matches
Vindicating the Vixens looks at
female characters in the Bible who have often been judged, condemned, marginalized, ignored, or ridiculed, and
shows how these women are actually presented
by the text as heroes to emulate or examples to be followed.
A
character (almost Always
Female) provides a distraction
by flirting with and / or
showing some skin to
While the blokes keeping their clothes on hints at the misogynistic values of his
characters, though, Garland crucially saves any full - body shots of his
female star for a striking scene, when the flesh on
show is being chosen
by Ava to cover her own body; a private moment not crafted
by a titillated creator but belonging to her perspective alone.
But though its pilot episode centered on sex - obsessed teenage boys (voiced
by Kroll and John Mulaney) being taunted
by a mystical creature called the «Hormone Monster» (also Kroll), the
show succeeded in tackling the anxieties of its
female characters (voiced
by Jessi Klein and Jenny Slate) just as grossly and hilariously.
Bridesmaids tries to dig a little deeper
by showing the kind of
female insecurity that would be familiar to movie audiences (not being as pretty as another woman, not finding a good man), but
shown as coming from hard - to - control selfishness that's specifically
character - based, followed up upon and explored — rather than a default
female trait.
Britney is the lead
female character in Toad Force V, an implied action TV
show mentioned several times in Mario Party Advance; Britney herself is only brought up briefly
by Mushbert in the mission DVD For Me.
CG cutscenes also lack a bit of forethought
by referring to your
character as «he» even though you can make a
female, and
showing plenty of first - person shots of your jacket - clad
character when you can actually choose to never wear the jacket.
Lulled
by the voice of Karen Carpenter singing «Yesterday Once More» on the station - wagon radio, she accidentally drives off and leaves her kids at a diner, and I'm reminded that it was the
female characters in «Boardwalk Empire» (Kelly Macdonald as Margaret Schroeder Thompson; Gretchen Mol as Gillian Darmody), as well as the minority
characters (Michael Kenneth Williams as Chalky White), who gave that
show an accessibility and emotional depth it wouldn't have had if it were populated only with its endless parade white male mobsters.
While, in these series, she placed her black
female body into spaces, like museums, where black women have historically been underrepresented, Weems, in Scenes & Take, celebrates the renaissance of television
shows with strong black lead
characters by black creators like Shonda Rhimes and Lee Daniels.