In recent years, especially in the wake of the #MeToo movement, the film has regained new meaning. There have been countless essays and op-eds commending the Megan Fox-starrer, which was once presented as a soft porn flick that pandered to the male fantasy. Back in the day it was a flop — critics and audience just could not go beyond objectifying Fox, and conveniently panned the unconventional plot that tries to subvert the damsel-in-distress trope common in horror films. All feminist subtext that Cody and Kusama intended — it seemed improbable for a film led by Fox and backed by a major studio could ever have such depth — was simply never acknowledged.
In recent years, especially in the wake of the #MeToo movement, the film has regained new meaning. There have been countless essays and op-eds commending the Megan Fox-starrer, which was once presented as a soft porn flick that pandered to the male fantasy. Back in the day it was a flop — critics and audience just could not go beyond objectifying Fox, and conveniently panned the unconventional plot that tries to subvert the damsel-in-distress trope common in horror films. All feminist subtext that Cody and Kusama intended — it seemed improbable for a film led by Fox and backed by a major studio could ever have such depth — was simply never acknowledged.