There are so many good bad women on our screens right now.
Good bad women. It’s not a typo.
I’m talking about the Jessica Jones of this world, the Yvonne “Vee” Parkers, the Harley Quinns, the Maleficents, the – and stay with me – the Cersei Lannisters.
We’ve finally allowed our female screen villains to be as complicated and conflicted as the men we’ve been staring at for years.
Tragic circumstances, sad childhoods and situations that make the audience experience that “well, she did suffer from …” moment.
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There are the typical “baddies” like Orange Is The New Black‘s murderous matriarch Yvonne “Vee” Parker and then there are those like Suicide Squad‘s Harley Quinn, whose darkness is much more complex.
Harley was introduced as the classic comic book criminal but soon revealed her intentions to extend beyond her own well-being. Her love for the joker, her loyalty to the squad and her troubled past were all expressed in a way that earned audience sympathy.
Vee, in contrast, entered Litchfield Penitentiary with one enemy and left with an entire cast. The beauty of her character was her absolute lack of redeeming qualities. She earned little love from the audience and nor did she deserve it.