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Soaliha Iqbal

We Can Celebrate Brendan Fraser’s Standing Ovation While Also Calling Out The Whale’s Fatphobia

The Venice Film Festival is pretty much exclusively associated with all *that* Don’t Worry Darling BTS tea right now (and for good reason), but can we take a moment to appreciate Brendan Fraser
The Whale The Mummy George of the Jungle Inkheart Journey to the Centre of the Earth Airheads Encino Man an interview with GQ, Phillip Berk The Whale The Whale The Guardian The Whale

The post We Can Celebrate Brendan Fraser’s Standing Ovation While Also Calling Out The Whale’s Fatphobia appeared first on PEDESTRIAN.TV .

and what his comeback to stardom actually means for him, despite ‘s fatphobia? As someone born in the late nineties, I grew up watching Fraser in . In fact, I watched all three films in that franchise probably every week for the first ten years of my life. Other notable movies of his I was obsessed with were  (1997), (2008) and (2008), to name a few. Older 90s babies would love him from  (1994) or his break-out film  (1992). After the early 2000s, Brendan Fraser’s heartthrob status tapered out of existence. Kind of. He had a few roles here and there, but his upward trajectory as a rising star swerved to a halting stop. He was poised as the next big thing, and then he wasn’t. In 2018, he revealed why. In during the peak of the the #MeToo movement, Brendan Fraser revealed he had been sexually assaulted in 2003 by the president of The Hollywood Foreign Press Association, (who denied it and called Fraser’s allegations a “fabrication”). Fraser spoke out about it and asked for an apology, which he ended up getting. He was rarely invited to back to the Globes after that fateful year, and he thinks he may have been blacklisted. After his star status faded, Brendan Fraser became known to be a bit of a tragic figure. His mother died of cancer, he went through a divorce, and he gained weight — something people relished in gossiping about because he was once Hollywood’s hottest hunk. Now, in 2022, he’s back in the spotlight. Fraser received a six-minute standing ovation for his performance in , a film where he stars as Charlie: a reclusive English teacher living with “severe obesity” who tries to rekindle a relationship with his estranged teenage daughter. It’s a triumphant comeback for a man who found himself kicked out of the film industry for taking a stand against sexual assault. The footage of the standing ovation shows him sobbing, overwhelmed with such a positive response. For the first time in a long time, he is being talked about because he’s talented and knows his craft, rather than people speculating about what happened to make the once-great Brendan Fraser so tragic (because being fat is tragic, apparently). Of course, if we’re going to talk about the fatphobia around Brendan Fraser, we also have to talk about the controversy surrounding the film he starred in. Brendan Fraser was put in a digital fat suit for, bulked up with CGI and prosthetics which led to criticisms about the film industry never actually casting fat people to play fat people. But more than an identity politics conversation, the discourse around this movie centres on the fact that it is yet another film that stereotypes fat people as sloppy, tragic, doomed figures who are pitied by everyone else. Fraser spoke to about the role and said playing Charlie made him realise how “strong” people living with obesity are. His quotes were actually pretty lovely, but let’s be real: part of the reason Fraser’s performance is so profound to the public audience is because he makes a fat person seem human. A feat indeed! Does Hollywood ever have “severely obese” characters who are happy and successful, where their body is not a key part of the plot? No. Fatness is synonymous with misery, depression and loneliness, and there’s only so many movies about this we should have to tolerate. Critics have already come out and used disgusting language to dehumanise Charlie and it’s a gross display of what people actually think of fat people. Shockingly, fat people have personalities and can be kind and interesting! There’s no way we could have ever known this without fatphobic movies because we clearly have never spoken to a fat person! It’s horrible and people are right to boycott the film, but I think there’s room for nuance regarding Brendan’s place in it. Fraser himself has had to deal with fatphobia in his career — though obviously not to the extent of people who are bigger than him. We’ve all seen the nasty before-and-after comparisons of his body online. As someone who was often cast in born sexy yesterday roles, his star quality dimmed the moment he wasn’t a walking fuckmachine. I think we can reach a point in our discussion where we can agree is unequivocally problematic in its depiction of fat people and should be called out for it, while also acknowledging the impact of Brendan Fraser’s comeback in regards to overcoming sexual assault in a workplace. He deserves this win, he deserves accolades and oscars and support and a six-minute standing ovation. He deserves to be recognised for overcoming rape culture in Hollywood and coming out successful anyway. And the film he has starred in is cruel. Two things are true, and we shouldn’t lose sight of one when discussing the other.
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