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| Index | 20 reviews in total |
17 out of 19 people found the following review useful:
Spot the Barbies, 11 May 2004
Author:
nightraven20
Filmmaker Sharon Cookson follows the beauty pageant path of Swan Brooner.
Coached by her mother, Robyn, Swan is taught how to behave on stage, how
to
be looked at. She is told to make eye contact, or to `spot' the judges. As
theorist John Berger would say Swan is the surveyed, while the judges are
the surveyors. We as audience members are surveyors as well, but we see
the
whole picture, including the training, the `tough love' that Robyn
provides,
the make up and hair process as well as seeing Swan act like a kid once in
a
while. Through seeing all of this, the camera does not re-objectify her
and
does not present her to us as a sexual object, as opposed to a simple tape
of just the beauty pageant itself may do. We as an audience are a
panopticon
(Foucault's term for an instrument that sees all) because we see all of
these things, or we see all of what Cookson wants us to
see.
Robyn forms her daughter's looks and behavior based on the stereotypical
female, such as Barbies (hence the title Living Dolls). A big part of the
pageants includes close up headshots, even for those as young as a few
months, where they are made up to look like pre-madonnas posing for Vogue.
Their eyes are accentuated with eyeliner and big eyelashes, fake teeth, as
well as hair extensions, hair coloring, and make up caked on to a
ridiculous
extent. Swan and the other girls are also encouraged to flirt with a man
who
serenades them, by batting their long, fake eyelashes.
Another rather ironic and disturbing part of the documentary is Robyn's
role
as a mother. Yes she is putting all this time and energy into her
daughter,
but she neglects the rest of her family. Her other daughter insists that
she's dedicated, yet when her other son Bubba runs away, she seems
un-phased
and determined to stay focused on Swan's pageants. Later Bubba gets put
into
a juvenile detention hall, yet Robyn still insists on using over 70,000
dollars on Swan rather then helping her son.
This in depth look at child beauty pageants and the non existent childhood
of Swan makes a big statement and critique not only on the practice of
pageants but of the people behind the pageants, the parents.
17 out of 20 people found the following review useful:
Like watching a car wreck at slow speed, 14 February 2002
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Author:
soriley from Brooklyn USA
Impossible to take your eyes off this insane documentary. There is no voice-over, the subjects speak for themselves. The subject matter is so over the top that it is almost hard to believe that it is real. You couldn't make up characters this over-the-top. An amazing, unblinking look at the insular world of children's beauty pagents, 90% of the world will find it utterly repulsive, 5% will think it's adorable. Do not miss it.
11 out of 14 people found the following review useful:
Critique of femininity in the film, 10 May 2004
Author:
gkjay22 from Binghamton, NY
`Living Dolls' is a very amusing film to say the least. The 'accurate'
depictions of beauty conveyed in the film only further promote the typical
American male definition of beauty and femininity: Barbie. The film
furthers these stereotypes with John Berger's idea of the surveyor and
surveyed, meaning that men act and women appear based on how the male
wants
them to appear. The film portrays young children made into dolls as they
are coached, dressed, and made up, in order to turn them into a 'beauty
queen.' The viewer cannot help but be amazed at the lengths parents will
go
through to make their child 'beautiful.' Your mouth will be agape as you
hear coaches talking about putting hair extensions on 18-month-old babies,
and fake teeth on children whose baby teeth were not perfectly straight.
It
is almost disturbing to see the objectification of these little women as
they turn into Barbie dolls.
In the process of following one child's, Swan's, journey to 'femininity,'
one cannot help but notice the lack of 'femininity' her mother possesses.
Ironically, as Swan turns into the ideal female, her mother breaks all
stereotypical barriers of what a women and mother should be. She is not
nurturing nor does she protect and provide for her family. She is an
ex-marine who spends the bulk of her time training Swan to be a beauty
queen
while she neglects her older children. As Swan is the center of her
mother's attention and time, her mom fails to notice her other children.
She does not notice her daughter maturing and starting to date, nor does
she
notice her son's cries for attention as he is constantly in and out of
jail.
Mom does not nurture and protect her children; she does not cook real
meals
for them and she acts as a drill sergeant with her children being her
soldiers. The lower class white family feels the economic burden of
Swan's
'perfection' as Mom spends the families money on the costs of pageant
entry
fees, transportation, professional coaching, custom made clothing, and
rewards for Swan's performance. It is also enjoyable to watch Swan's mom
be
the dominant partner in her relationship. One cannot help but chuckle
when
watching Mom's boyfriend bike ride to work as she takes his van.
`Living Dolls' is a movie for the open minded that will undoubtedly make
you
laugh several times while making you awestruck at the objectification of
these children.
11 out of 15 people found the following review useful:
This is NOT a way of life in the south!!, 4 August 2002
Author:
Noelle W Dempsey from Albuquerque, NM
I found watching this documentary about child beauty queens quite
disturbing. The mentally abusive mother, the neglected siblings and
brow-beaten boyfriend who was coerced into giving up his retirement money
to
fund glittery costumes and adult makeup, the creepy pageant presenter
crooning at little girls who are painted up like 25 year old women going
out
on a Saturday night, five year old girls using "come hither" looks to
influence the judges, eighteen month old babies getting hair plugs...yes,
very creepy.
However, what I found quite disturbing is the at the beginning of the film
there is a claim that these pageants are a "way of life" in the south.
Absolutely not true! I grew up in Alabama (not in a trailer by the way)
and
never saw anything like this. Please do not think this is common in that
region..only among a misguided few.
8 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
femininity as a performance, 9 May 2004
Author:
tanyamm223
After viewing Living Dolls, I am now aware of how femininity is a
performance. The little girls featured in this documentary showed how
certain characteristics of femininity are learned and then performed.
During this performance at beauty pageants, little girls are taught to be
erotic and are sexualized in order to promote what is called `the total
package'. The film exposed the way it could be seen as the parents of these
contestants promote the commodification of their children. Watching the
actions of the girls participating in the pageant, we can identify the ways
class, race, and sexuality intersects in the production of the `total
package'.
The girls are objectified then and then play into the notion of being
surveyed by the male gaze, where you become a spectacle based the male
perspective. But they are not only viewed on the male gaze, we take note
how other females also survey each other. The main goal of the contestants
in the pageant is to achieve the total package, consisting of modeling a
well fit dress, heavy use of makeup, personality based on how they react to
the judges. Families will go out of their way to achieve this goal by
having fake teeth made to cover where the girl may have lost her tooth, and
custom make outfits. The girls learn the value of competition by watching
tapes of their rivals performing and criticizing them. By doing so, they
learn what to do and what not to do once on stage. This shows how the girls
are constructed and splits to be a surveyor of her by looking at herself
from a male perspective. The girl begins to internalize herself. The girls
are taught to be sexual at such a young pre-sexual age. With practice, they
develop the skills to relate erotically to their performance on stage.
Stage outfits consist of flashy apparel and slits in the costumes. For the
actual performance, the girls are sexualizing their singing and learn how to
dance in such a manner. Their routines flaunt erotic and sexualized
characteristics, which help them to achieve the total package. Race, class,
and sexuality are clearly depicted in the pageant. The majority of these
contestants have blonde hair and blue eyes. The maturity of speaking,
vocabulary, and diction of the children identify them as being in a
particular class. It is also apparent through the clothes the girls model
and the stylists that come to the pageants that they must be of a middle to
upper economic class. In contrast, educationally, one would put them into a
lower class. This is evident from their inability to understand what they
are doing to their children. Sexuality is represented when they cut the
talent portion of the pageants, yet the modeling portions and the section
where the lounge singer sings to the girls remained. This section with the
lounge singer displays how these young girls masquerade their femininity on
stage. Eroticism is depicted when she sways seductively to the music,
smiles invitingly, and the batting of her eyelashes towards him.
This whole segment shows the adult sexualization of these young contestants.
The film reproduces existing stereotypes of femininity. This is a
performance that is socially learned. Through practice, this behavior is
learned and applied to the performing on stage in the pageants, as well as
other areas in life. A woman may accentuate her femininity in order to
attain something she desires. For example, flaunt her femininity to receive
a certain position in the work force. The concept of femininity as a
performance, teaches us about gender roles and how they can be
interchangeable. Since this is a learned characteristic and performance, we
shouldn't assign roles. A woman can be masculine and a man can be feminine
as well. The pageant shows little girls having erotic and sexualized
characteristics, which help them reach their goal of wining a pageant title.
7 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
An outstanding documentary. See it as a double feature with "Best in Show", 21 March 2003
Author:
TooShortforThatGesture from Los Angeles
I watched this film this afternoon and agree with most of the other comments
on it. The topic (child beauty pageants) is very disturbing. The pageant
circuit obviously exists for the benefit of the adults involved, not the
children. The pageants are a club, a place to belong, like any club, but
clearly fill emotional needs in the parent/members. These needs vary - the
need to "win" something, the need to have a purpose in life, the urge to
create, a frustrated desire to perform, a need to escape their lives and
homes and travel, etc. etc.
As many have commented, it is frightening to see children, even infants,
wearing layers of make-up and wearing "extensions" and wigs and dental
applicances to hide the gaps when a baby tooth makes an untimely exit from
that all-important smile. But what is truely chilling is realizing that the
parents involved seem to have absolutely no self-awarenes, no sense at all
that this is an activity they do for their own benefit and not their
child's. The children are used as show-horses. The difference between
these pageants and the Westchester Dog Show lies only in the fact that the
dogs's owners don't try to make the dogs wear make-up.
I am sure that the kids involved do have fun with pageant life often. But,
without a diatribe about the multitude of ways in which children can be
twisted by having their parents' needs put first or by having their
self-worth dependent upon their looks and "charm" and by age-inappropriate
competition, I will simply say that the documentary makes it clear that a
life on the pageant circuit should be accompanied by coupons for adult
therapy.
(As an aside, I have to say that as a gay man, I was uncomfortable with the
gay couple who work as very successful coaches for some of these children,
including the daughter of one of the men. In many ways they seemed devoted
to proving up every stereotype of gay men. On the other hand, I think they
make a good case for gay parenting. They certainly aren't do any WORSE than
the other parents in the film. I also respect the filmmaker greatly for the
fact that the gay aspect was presented simply as a reality and was not
played up. I do wonder, however, how many of the Mom's who drive hundreds
of miles and get second mortgages on their homes to hire the couple turn
around and vote for homophobic politicians.)
Anyway, the horror of all this aside, the documentary is terrific because it
is invisible -- it simply allows the pageant world to speak for itself.
There are no comments by the filmmakers who seem to limit their overt
involvement to a series of intersticial titles every so often (the work is
episodic) that just establish the setting or provide a fact. They do a
pretty amazing job of piecing together what feels like a neutral "just the
facts, ma'am" film allowing the viewer to draw his or her own conclusion.
Also, the film does not condescend to these people. In fact, I think that a
fan of the pageants might walk away thinking that the film was a positive
one, supportive of pageant life. That's a hard line to walk for any
documentarian.
2 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
A Realistic and Sad Story, 17 January 2007
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Author:
the-evil-cult from Australia
Living Dolls is about Swam Brooner, a five-year-old little girl who
competes in child beauty pageants. Sometimes I wonder whether she wants
to do this because she often seems sad. Her smiles on-stage seem fake.
Her mother is extremely pushy and critical, telling her daughter to
look up, not sing too low, etc. At the end, Swan wins prize money but
the family has spent much more than the prize money on clothes,
transport, makeup, accommodation, etc, so really the whole exercise was
not profitable. If the same effort were put into trying to get her into
college I think that might have been more profitable. Whether the child
will be happier in college or in beauty pageants is something I don't
know but I would bet on the former.
I have recently heard that Swan's mother died and she is living in
Alaska now. She is 13 and no longer doing beauty pageants. Even though
she won some beauty pageants, she lost as well, and it was really sad
to see her face in this documentary when she lost.
Some comments were made about the observation that although many of the
children in these child beauty pageants were very pretty, many of the
mothers of these children were obese and homely. This suggests the
possibility that these mothers are trying to compensate for their
failures by succeeding through their children. That is, the parents are
using their children to live their own lives.
4 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
An inside look at the ugly behind beauty pageants., 27 April 2005
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Author:
bestknown4failure from United States
I thought this was so interesting to watch. Even after seeing it once, I continue to tune in whenever it is on. There's something captivating about it. I can't believe some of these poor girls. I figure maybe, some of the kids want to do it and it does look fun, but they have pageants that involve newborns. They obviously don't pick this life. Parents need to understand that they've lived their lives and it is their obligation to let their child do the same. Parents should do whatever they can to preserve individuality and the mothers that force their kids into this strip all of that away. It's was sad the way Swan's mother just yelled orders at her all the time, but a few years after the documentary aired, she and Swan's father died. So as much as I was feeling.. wow what a terrible mom, at least she had one. Poor girl.
4 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Natural? Beauty, 10 May 2004
Author:
dinke19 from New York
In this film, there is documentary style depictions of people involved in beauty pageants. It presents views of the beauty pageant world as generally conforming to a stereotypical pattern of beauty. In many ways, the girls are shown as beautiful only by their conformance to social norms rather than based on character. There are quite a few examples in this film that portray the necessity to achieve to sexual norms in order to be successful in beauty pageants. Also, the film depicts many girls' ways as needing to show off their femininity, as though the central element of female desire for beauty is to show off their beauty and to be recognized as beautiful. Keep in mind that the nature of beauty is being shown here as a creation and a presentation rather than an inherent aspect of the girls in the pageant. The femininity of the girls is being presented for the viewing of society rather than a natural product. The coaches and/or parents are seemingly encouraging the viewers under the guise of success in the beauty pageant world. In general, the primary element that the documentary portrays is that society is dictating norms of behavior and appearance, not the individuals. These `norms' are suggested to be essential to being beautiful leading the girls to believe that if they do not fit the stereotype then they are somehow inferior, hurting their self-esteem as well. The beauty pageant just reinforces female subservience to men, since the girls are presenting their beauty for a generally male oriented viewer, this creates the suggestion that women are meant to display themselves. Overall, this documentary shows the harsh reality that society places enormous pressure on exterior beauty rather than interior.
3 out of 6 people found the following review useful:
One of the best horror tragedies ever made, 18 February 2002
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Author:
ERK from Pittsburgh
If you've never seen exploitation documentary, this is a great starting
point. As another reviewer said, the subjects speak for themselves. The
scariest thing about this disgusting true-life story is that the subjects
would probably find it a supportive, wholesome story of family life with a
precocious child. Any sane viewer will see it as it is: children trapped by
the reality-warping gravitational field of their mothers' solipsistic
quests
for validation.
The mothers seems to fit into one of 2 categories: 5% glamour queens and,
95% bovine / porcine wannabes. Both are equally disturbing for entirely
different reasons. The projection of their failed hopes and warped
frustrations onto their trusting children is horrific to
watch.
Outstanding documentary. A must-see.
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