Entry tags:
Manic Pixie Dream Girls
Full disclosure: I suspect that if my life were a movie, critics would be dismissing my character as just another Manic Pixie Dream Girl. Which sometimes leads me to ponder the trope -- one conclusion I've come to is that the MPDG tends to be identified based on her appearance rather than her story function -- which IMO means there's a lot of mis-identification going on.
If we agree that the MPDG's classic role is to get the uptight hero to relax and appreciate life -- then Ramona Flowers in Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World is the *opposite* of a MPDG -- her role is to make Scott grow up (for certain values of "grow up"). Also, she's dour rather than manic. But she's cute and "indie"-looking (related question which I don't currently feel qualified to get into -- are there any PoC MPDGs?), and therefore she gets held up as an example of the trope.
You know who I think is a prime example of the trope? Maude, in Harold and Maude. But she's seventy-nine. It might also be that it's an older movie; no one ever seems to cite all the heroines of 'thirties screwball comedy either (Katherine Hepburn in Bringing Up Baby? Now *there's* a Manic Pixie Dream Girl.) There might, however, be another reason why Maude doesn't necessarily ping as an MPDG, and it still has to do with her age. Having lived to seventy-nine -- and a quick, wordless moment also establishes her as a Holocaust survivor -- her love of Life can be read as read as the hard-won wisdom of someone who's gone through hell and come out the other side. Or as some form of PTSD. Either way, it's not naiveté. Basically, she's Yoda in The Empire Strikes Back.)
Which leads me to wonder about the male version of this trope, which I guess is The Wise Fool? Is he ok because he has no romantic entanglements and therefore can't be dismissed as just an adjunct to another character? Would a quirky female character be ok as long as the story revolved around her Fighting Crime or something, or would she then just get tossed into the drawer marked Mary Sue?
If we agree that the MPDG's classic role is to get the uptight hero to relax and appreciate life -- then Ramona Flowers in Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World is the *opposite* of a MPDG -- her role is to make Scott grow up (for certain values of "grow up"). Also, she's dour rather than manic. But she's cute and "indie"-looking (related question which I don't currently feel qualified to get into -- are there any PoC MPDGs?), and therefore she gets held up as an example of the trope.
You know who I think is a prime example of the trope? Maude, in Harold and Maude. But she's seventy-nine. It might also be that it's an older movie; no one ever seems to cite all the heroines of 'thirties screwball comedy either (Katherine Hepburn in Bringing Up Baby? Now *there's* a Manic Pixie Dream Girl.) There might, however, be another reason why Maude doesn't necessarily ping as an MPDG, and it still has to do with her age. Having lived to seventy-nine -- and a quick, wordless moment also establishes her as a Holocaust survivor -- her love of Life can be read as read as the hard-won wisdom of someone who's gone through hell and come out the other side. Or as some form of PTSD. Either way, it's not naiveté. Basically, she's Yoda in The Empire Strikes Back.)
Which leads me to wonder about the male version of this trope, which I guess is The Wise Fool? Is he ok because he has no romantic entanglements and therefore can't be dismissed as just an adjunct to another character? Would a quirky female character be ok as long as the story revolved around her Fighting Crime or something, or would she then just get tossed into the drawer marked Mary Sue?