e103. Birds of Prey and the Fantaboulous Deconstruction of one VoxPopcast

All across the world, everyone is trapped in their homes riding out the COVID-19 pandemic. Movie cineplexes are shut down. Sports, Concerts and other Events are being cancelled. TV shows are running out of new episodes. Just this week, we learned that comic books are going to stop shipping. We’re running out of pop culture. BUT… we still have a show to do. And luckily there’s stuff to talk about that we hadn’t gotten a chance to. One of those things is the movie Birds of Prey and the Fantaboulous Emancipation of one Harley Quinn which came out earlier this year. There was a little bit of controversy surrounding the movie, as it underperformed box office projections and critics wondered if this due to its feminist message, sexism in the market place or a complete and total breakdown of the marketing department. Join Katya, Hannah and Mav as we they break down the film and talk about what they loved about it, what worked, what didn’t, deconstruct it and speculate as to what went wrong. Citations and Links: * This episode’s Call for Comments* Stream Birds of Prey on Amazon Prime* Charting with Dan by Dan Murrell* “Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema” by Laura Mulvey * Thank you to Maximilian’s thoughtForm Music for our theme* Follow Hannah on Twitter: @hannahleerogers* Follow Katya on Instagram: @justthatnerdkid * Follow Mav on Twitter: @chrismaverick* Follow Mav’s Personal Blog: http://chrismaverick.com* Follow us on Twitter: @voxpopcast* Follow us on Instagram: @voxpopcast* Follow us on Facebook: http://facebook.com/voxpopcast* Make sure you subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Spotify or wherever podcasts are found and please leave us a review! Listen on Youtube:

Om Podcasten

Vox Populorum is a blog and podcast devoted to pop culture criticism. We believe that the best way to understand culture is to discuss it. But we also believe that it's a lot more fun to have these conversations throwing back a couple beers at the bar rather than in a classroom. Please join our weekly round table of media critics, academics, creators, artists, professors, students and fans for an engaging discussion about movies, novels, comic books, television, video games, music or whatever else we happen to think of! Nec audiendi qui solent dicere, Vox populi, vox Dei, quum tumultuositas vulgi semper insaniae proxima sit.