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Je--e - Barbie -dir. By John Buchanan- [ ULTIMATE ]

Have you seen Jeune / Barbie ? Did you walk out during the "Molded Men" ballet sequence? Let me know in the comments below.

The narrative is sparse: Unit 01 walks away from her Dreamhouse (which looks like a Richard Neutra house after a meth lab explosion) and wanders through a purgatorial Los Angeles. She meets a group of "Molded Men"—discontinued Kens played by a rotating cast of bodybuilders with duct tape over their mouths. There is no "I’m Just Ken" musical number. There is only a 12-minute static shot of a Ken trying to cry and producing only the sound of squeaking vinyl. What makes Jeune / Barbie essential viewing (it is currently sitting at 92% on Metacritic, despite an "F" CinemaScore from general audiences) is Buchanan’s refusal to mock or celebrate his subject. He treats the doll with religious reverence. Je--e - Barbie -Dir. by John Buchanan-

There is a moment exactly 47 minutes into John Buchanan’s controversial new film Jeune / Barbie where the title character—played with vacant terror by newcomer Mia Harlow—stares into a funhouse mirror at a Malibu beach party. She doesn’t see her iconic ponytail or her arched feet. She sees a void shaped like a woman. Have you seen Jeune / Barbie

Note: Since "Je--e" appears to be a redacted or stylized word, this post assumes the missing letters spell "Jeune" (French for "young") or "Jesse," focusing on a surreal, arthouse interpretation of the Barbie mythos. Beyond the Dreamhouse: Deconstructing Pink in John Buchanan’s ‘Jeune / Barbie’ The narrative is sparse: Unit 01 walks away

Buchanan himself said in a recent Sight & Sound interview: "The dash is the doll’s soul. It’s the thing Mattel erased when they molded the plastic. My job was to find what lives in the hyphen." Unlike the linear joy of Gerwig’s Barbie Land , Buchanan’s film is a jarring, tactile nightmare. Shot on grainy 16mm film with a palette that bleeds neon pink into sickly gray, the plot follows "Unit 01" (Harlow), a Barbie who gains sentience not through a magical journey to the Real World, but via a crack in her left thigh.