'Chick
Flicks': After
examining Filmsite's own Greatest 'Guy'
Movies of All-Time (illustrated) compiled by this site, or
the 100 Greatest Guy Movies Ever Made and
the 50 Best Guy Movies of All Time,
it only seemed fair to put together a list of gal films or chick
flicks (a demeaning and damning term, however, since this sub-genre
of film was traditionally known as the "woman's
films - melodramas " in the 30s and 40s). It is not
supposed to be an all-inclusive and comprehensive collection of all
'chick flicks' ever made - that would be impossible. Familiar
quotes or taglines from each film have been included in this
compilation.
'Chick flicks'
have often been put down as trite, sappy, emotional, soap-opera-ish,
cliched, melodramatic, weepy, and trivial. Often considered an all-encompassing
sub-genre, they mostly include dialogue-laden, formulated romantic
comedies (with mis-matched lovers or female relationships), tearjerkers
and gal-pal films, movies about family crises and emotional catharsis,
some traditional 'weepies' and fantasy-action adventures, sometimes
with foul-mouthed and empowered females, and female bonding situations
involving families, mothers, daughters and children.
Basic themes of 'chick flicks' include self-discovery,
efforts to find the right man (although often misguided or attracting
the wrong one), mistaken identity complications, various love triangles,
'Cinderella' or 'ugly-duckling' tales, and lots of female bonding.
Actors and actresses typically associated with 'chick'
flicks include Meg Ryan, Barbra Streisand, Hugh Grant, Robert
Pattinson, Owen Wilson, Mel Gibson, Emma Thompson, Cameron Diaz,
Renee Zellweger, Meg Ryan, Gwyneth Paltrow, Reese Witherspoon,
Drew Barrymore, Julia Roberts, Jennifer Aniston, Jennifer Garner,
Kate Hudson, Rachel McAdams, Sandra Bullock, and Katherine Heigl,
among others. From the following list, it appears that 'chick'
flicks have become a prominent staple of films beginning in the
mid-1980s and forever since. Compared to the earlier "woman's
film," film critic Molly Haskell has written that the:
"chick flick," chirrupy and upbeat,
sings a different tune, more defiant and ironic, postmodern
and post-feminist, like the growling braggadocio of "grrrl
power." Where "grrrl
power" says "I can be cute and assertive too," "chick
flick" says: "I'm emancipated but it's OK to long
for romance, to get hung up on a guy, to obsess about mothers
or children."
It must be noted that some of the most successful
box-office films of all time have been 'chick flicks' - such
as the romantic comedies Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994,
UK), My
Big Fat Greek Wedding (2002),
Mona Lisa Smile (2003), or the # 4 film of 1990, Pretty
Woman (1990).
Recently since the year 2000, there has been a
rash of lightweight, female-oriented romantic films (or rom-coms),
including some that passed by fairly unnoticed. Many of them
have been with the same chick-flick superstar:
- Sandra Bullock: While
You Were Sleeping (1995), In Love and War (1996), Hope Floats
(1998), Practical Magic (1998), Forces of Nature (1999),
Miss Congeniality (2000), Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood
(2002), Two Weeks Notice (2002), The Lake House (2006), The
Proposal (2009), and All About Steve (2009)
- Julia Roberts: Steel
Magnolias (1989), Pretty
Woman (1990), Sleeping with the Enemy (1991), Dying
Young (1991), Something to Talk About (1995), My Best Friend's
Wedding (1997), Stepmom (1998), Notting
Hill (1999), Runaway Bride (1999), America's Sweethearts (2001),
Mona Lisa Smile (2003), Eat Pray Love (2010)
- Kate & Leopold (2001) with Meg Ryan
- Serendipity (2001) with Kate Beckinsale
- Crossroads (2002) with Britney Spears
- Maid in Manhattan (2002) with Jennifer Lopez
- 40
Days and 40 Nights (2002) with
Josh Hartnett
- A Walk to Remember (2002) with Mandy Moore
- Life or Something Like It (2002) with Angelina
Jolie
- Kate Hudson: How to Lose a Guy
in 10 Days (2003),
Raising Helen (2004), and Bride Wars (2009)
- Little
Black Book (2004) with Brittany Murphy
- A Cinderella Story (2004) with Hilary Duff
- The Wedding Date (2005) with Debra Messing
- The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants (2005),
with Amber Tamblyn, Alexis Bledel, America Ferrera, and Blake
Lively
- The
Perfect Man (2005) with Heather Locklear and Hilary Duff
- Jennifer Garner: 13 Going on 30
(2004), Catch and Release (2006), and Ghosts of
Girlfriends Past (2009)
- Failure to Launch (2006) with Sarah Jessica Parker
- The Holiday (2006) with
Cameron Diaz and Kate Winslet
- She's the Man (2006) with Amanda Bynes
- Drew Barrymore: 50 First Dates
(2004), The Jane Austen Book Club (2007), Music
and Lyrics (2007), and Going the Distance (2010)
- P.S., I Love You (2007) with
Hilary Swank
- Nights in Rodanthe (2008) with Diane Lane
- The Women (2008), with Meg Ryan and Annette
Bening
- Katherine Heigl: 27 Dresses (2008),
The Ugly Truth (2009), Life As We Know It (2010) and One
For the Money (2012)
- He's Just Not That Into You (2009) with
Ginnifer Goodwin
- Remember Me (2010) with Robert Pattinson
- Jennifer Aniston: Along Came Polly
(2004), The Break-Up (2006), He's Just Not That Into You
(2009), The Switch (2010), and Just Go With It (2011)
- Sex and the City (2008)
- Confessions of a Shopaholic (2009) with Isla
Fisher
- Valentine's Day (2010) with lots of chick-flick
stars including Julia Roberts, Jennifer Garner
- Crazy, Stupid Love (2011) with Ryan Gosling,
Steve Carrell, Julianne Moore, Emma Stone and Marisa Tomei
- Friends With Benefits
(2011) with Justin Timberlake and Mila Kunis
- No Strings
Attached (2011) with Ashton Kutcher and Natalie Portman
- Pitch Perfect (2012) with Anna Kendrick
- Rachel McAdams: The Notebook (2004),
The Time Traveler's Wife (2009) and The
Vow (2012)
More About Chick Flicks:
See also Greatest
Tearjerker Films, Moments and Scenes (illustrated)
- many that are "great chick flicks" - and the
genre of Romantic Films.
Also 50 Greatest Chick
Flicks by O Magazine. Another useful resource
for this subject is The
Rough Guide to Chick Flicks by Samantha Cook, and The Ultimate
Guide to Chick Flicks by Kim Adelman.
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