I finally saw Barbie yesterday, and it was every bit as fabulous as I expected. The clothes, the colors, the dance routines. But also, the message. Because if there's one thing that director Greta Gerwig makes clear, it's that being a woman is complicated. To paraphrase America Ferrera's Gloria, all we really want at the end of the day is to "wear a flattering top and feel okay." Yet sometimes the world -- and more to the point, the patriarchy -- makes that more difficult than it should be. So it's no wonder that Barbie -- both the "stereotypical" one played to perfection by Margot Robbie and all the others who share the same name -- would rather stay in Barbie Land where women are always in power and cellulite is a myth, than venture out into the real world only to be arrested for rollerblading.
It's no surprise that it's Weird Barbie (Kate McKinnon) who convinces Stereotypical Barbie to hang with the humans. After all, it doesn't get much more real than having a toddler yank your hair out by the roots and tattoo your face with Jem-style graffiti. McKinnon kooks it up brilliantly, pouring every ounce of SNL alien abductee energy into channeling the discarded doll. As for her aesthetic, it's excellently edgy, a kind of warped candy cute. Her outfit and house are my favorite.
But this isn't about Weird Barbie. It's about Stereotypical Barbie. And what she learns is what we all learn at some point -- that things aren't always perfect. Also, that sometimes it's better to have an Allan (Michael Cera) than a Ken (Ryan Gosling). Finally, not to trust men in charge. (I'm looking at you, shades-of-Mugatu Mattel CEO Will Ferrell.) Yet however imperfect, it's still okay. Because being human is a beautiful mess, and the only way to clean it up is to muss your hair and snag your stockings. Authenticity is better than plastic.
And that, Barbie girls, is nothing to toy with.