For the Unit 3 project, I chose to analyze the film Me Before You directed by Thea Sharrock,
produced by Alison Owen, Karen Rosenfelt, and Sue Baden-Powell. The producing
companies are Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and New Line Cinema. It was released May 23,
2016 and earned $18.72 million opening weekend. The film was based on the novel
Me Before You written by Jojo Moyes.
The film focuses on a woman named
Louisa ‘Lou’ Clark, who is chatty, quirky, and loves her bold fashion. When Lou
loses her job at a bakery, she is given to opportunity to help care for Will
Traynor, a successful, wealthy, and once-active man, who became paralyzed two
years earlier in a car accident. Will
has a negative outlook on life, he believes that he is only merely existing,
because he is unable to live the active lifestyle he once had. Slowly but
surely, Lou’s cheery attitude persuades Will to go out to different events with
her. The more time that Lou and Will spend together, the more they get to know
about each other. Lou, how she once was going to go off to college, but her
family fell on hard times and needed her support. Will, how he once pretty much
had it all, a gorgeous girlfriend, active and thrilling lifestyle, countless
friends, and lost it all to the accident. But Will has more secrets that Lou
eventually finds out about. Will and his parents had made a deal, after Will
tried to end his own life, that if he still wanted to go in six months’ time,
they would go to Switzerland as a family and Will would be medically induced.
Of course his parents were very much against that, but had to honor his wishes
and the deal they made. As a counter-move to get Will to change his mind, his
mother hired Lou hoping that she would bring light into Will’s life. Will and
Lou do fall in love, through their romantic trips to the horse races, and the
symphony, and even his ex-girlfriend’s wedding. But on their final trip, a
tropical paradise island, Will finally tells Lou what she knew all along. Will
explains that even though he does love Lou, he still won’t be able to live life
the way he would want to, and how he believes that’s not a life worth living.
Through a lot of soul searching, and a talk with her dad, Lou decides to go
with Will and his family to Switzerland to see him go. The film ends with Lou
sitting in a cute café in Paris, reading a letter from Will explaining how he
set up a bank account for her to use for school so she can finally stop taking
care of everyone else and do something for her.
From a feminist standpoint, I would
have to say that this film does reinforces patriarchal views and stereotypes.
The film reinforces it in the way that Will is a handsome, athletic, rich,
white male. Where Lou is more average, quirky, and smart. Will is clearly superior to Lou. If it had not been
for Will’s accident, these two surely would have never met. Of course after the
accident, Will is still handsome and rich, but he isn’t able to live the life
he once had so he has to almost “settle” for Lou’s company. It also reinforces the idea that men in
general are superior to women.
There are also many, typical romance
elements to this story. Lou is the poor, kind of an outcast girl, from a poor
family, and no real future. Will is the handsome prince that comes to save her
from her life. He saves her by 1. Employing her to help out her family and 2.
By then giving her the bank account so she can go to college. This implies once
again that Will is better than Lou, and almost says that she couldn’t have gone
off to college without Will’s help. There aren’t really any evil queens or ugly
stepsisters in the film, except maybe Will’s ex-girlfriend who breaks up with
him after his accident. And that’s where the tables turn in the “who saves who”
debate. Lou teaches Will what true love is like. She loves him after his
disability, so not just for his looks or for his money, but for who he really
is as a person. So one could argue that Lou also in turn saved Will.
Overall, I did really enjoy the film
and I liked the story line, except the part of Will dying in the end. Once
going more in-depth though, I could see the flaws in it, from a feminist
standpoint. All in all, it’s a great movie and can teach someone a lot about
love, life, and that we really need to enjoy the time we have, because
everything can change in an instant.
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