
Emily Blunt seems to be the most common victim of this phenomena, forced to play the 'token love interest' in either dull romantic subplots that take up valuable screen-time (The Wolfman, The Great Buck Howard) or the 'prize to be won' in films that are seemingly about the core romance but merely tell their story explicitly from the male's point of view (The Adjustment Bureau, Wild Target). Without going into spoilers, her role in Looper is a step in the right direction. The most recent offender is Lawless, a drab and often lifeless crime drama that nonetheless is made even worse by the needless insertion of two (2!) token love interests. Adding insult to injury is that both undefined female "leads" are played by actresses (Jessica Chastain and Mia Wasikowska) who deserve far better than being 'the babe who gets courted to show off the male's 'virility'. Did anyone care one whit about whether Vera Farmiga ended up with Leonardo DiCaprio or Matt Damon in The Departed? As basically the only female in an all-male ensemble, she had no role to play except as a prize to be battled over. Was there any reason Ryan Reynolds needed a girlfriend to romance and then 'tragically' abandon in Safe House? The answer is arguably that there exists the idea that a male action hero isn't relatable or sympathetic unless he has a pretty girl on his arm or waiting in his bed.
Obviously I don't want to too-harshly judge an unreleased film, but it appears that Emma Stone will be playing the same 'insert tits and ass here' in The Gangster Squad, playing a symbol of Sean Penn's power and a prize to be stolen away by Ryan Gosling (trailer). And, if I may digress for a paragraph, no matter how charming Stone was during her brief screen-time in this summer's The Amazing Spider-Man, Gwen Stacey served no role in the story other than to be romanced by Peter Parker and (being vague here) react to the actions of her cop father (Dennis Leary). The Amazing Spider-Man actually represents the second 'reboot', following The Incredible Hulk, where the female lead's role was slimmed and dumbed down in an attempt to appeal to 'mass audiences' (god forbid we have a repeat of Kristen Dunst's Mary Jane who had the gall to be a flawed human being with her own story in all three Sam Raimi Spider-Man films). I'm also no fan of the transformation of Rachel Dawes (from full-blown supporting character to romantic prize/woman-in-refrigerator) in the first two Chris Nolan Batman films. In all three examples of comic book cinema, the female lead went from full-blown supporting character (or in the case of Jennifer Connelly's Betty Ross in Hulk, co-lead) to 'the girl to be won' with no outside life or goals of her own save for ending up with the male lead in some capacity.
The end result is usually the same. Films that have no real place for female presence end up inserting a token romance in the mix purely to justify casting a babe or two (surely the makers of The Bourne Legacy could have found something better for Rachel Weisz to do than be the 'tag-along girl'). Or worse, this idea stems from the notion that audiences won't relate to a male character unless he has a hot love interest on his arm or waiting for him at home. This process results in a subplot that serves no real function and merely adds an extra reel or so to a film that affects the entire pacing for the worse. It generally makes great films merely very good while making bad films worse. The best case scenario would be a Hollywood that told stories from all points of views and successfully wrote vibrant female characters even in stories that were inherently male-centric. But until that day comes, better to not have any female characters in otherwise all-male ensembles than to arbitrarily insert a token love interest to no good end. Come what may, I admire the honesty shown in Argo (review) and Killing Them Softly (review coming next month). They are male-centric stories that don't arbitrarily insert romance based on the insulting idea that women only like movies with mushy stuff in them. After all, why pretend?
Scott Mendelson