Revenge is a 2017 French revenge action thriller film written and directed by Coralie Fargeat, and starring Matilda Lutz, Kevin Janssens, Vincent Colombe and Guillaume Bouchde. The plot follows a young woman who is raped and assaulted and left for dead in the desert by three men, where she recovers and seeks vengeance upon her attackers.

Coralie Fargeat was inspired to make a revenge film in the vein of Mad Max or Rambo, "with strong characters on a phantasmagoric journey."[4] Though Fargeat was aware of the rape and revenge film genre, she did not set out to make a film of that type and had never seen I Spit On Your Grave, one of the most well-known films of the genre.[5] Said Fargeat, "I wanted to take this story out of the genre of horror. I didn't want Jen to be screaming and suffering for the whole movie, trying to survive. I wanted her to go somewhere else and transform into a cool and badass character."[4] One of Fargeat's inspirations was the Steven Spielberg film Duel because it manages to generate tension using "so few elements: a car, a truck and that's it."[4][5]


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Critics praised Revenge for its subversion of rape and revenge tropes and embraced the film as a welcome addition to the genre from a female lens.[16] Andrew Whalen of Newsweek said the film is "the closest thing to a feminist rape-revenge tale since Abel Ferrara's Ms. 45."[17] A.O. Scott of The New York Times wrote, "Blunt, bloody and stylish almost in spite of itself, Revenge is a synthesis of exploitation and feminism."[18] Multiple critics compared the film to French New Extremity movies like High Tension and Martyrs.[17][19] Christy Lemire of RogerEbert.com awarded the film 3 and  stars out of 4 and wrote, "with cinematographer Robrecht Heyvaert, Fargeat has created a high-contrast hellscape, a place filled with equal amounts of danger and discovery."[20]

In a more critical review, Lena Wilson of Slate questioned whether the film can still be considered feminist if it conforms to rape and revenge film tropes, citing Jen's skimpy costuming throughout the film as an example.[22] Wilson argued, "If rape is the pinnacle of male disregard for female life, what do we accomplish by presenting a protagonist who gleans and internalizes that violent indifference? Our protagonist is transformed, but she converts from one male fantasy to another: wide-eyed damsel to hardened action hero."[22] Kevin Maher of The Times voiced a similar sentiment: "Labelled a 'feminist rape-revenge movie', it takes all the traditional tenets of that most dubious of genres and simply does them again."[23]

A young woman poses as a new resident and returns to an affluent beachside town, the Hamptons, in order to seek revenge on the families that wronged her 20 years earlier. In the midst of her plan, she uncovers secrets, lies, and affairs, and finds herself in multiple dangerous situations that could tear the beachside town apart.

As of January 2021,[update] the series holds an approval rating of 69% on the review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes.[33] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the series a score of 67 out of 100 based on 28 critics.[34] Dorothy Rabinowitz of The Wall Street Journal praised the series, writing, "The arrival of one pure and unadulterated drama about a passion as old as man is something to celebrate. That's particularly true when that drama is as spellbinding in its satisfyingly gaudy way, as Revenge turns out to be", while awarding particular praise to Van Camp for a "beguiling and entirely chilling study in revenge lust".[35] Writing for The New York Times, Alessandra Stanley compared the series favorably with Gossip Girl, concluding that it has "just enough campy suspense to be enjoyable".[36] Episode 5 of the series received particular acclaim, with C. Orlando of TV Fanatic writing that "Revenge took things to a whole new level this week", and noting with reference to the set-up of David Clarke that "Victoria seems the only one with a conscience."[37]

We can easily see how the desire for vengeance may motivate someone to believe that revenge is morally appropriate, or the desire for wealth may motivate someone to believe that inequalities are justified, whether or not these moral claims are true.

I would suggest that revenge bedtime procrastination extends beyond the first layer of capitalism. I agree our toxic work culture can cause this as a widespread phenomenon, but I feel like in the US it also connects to the ideal of rugged individualism and our lack of a social safety net.

You stay up binging a mediocre show. You can\u2019t stop scrolling Instagram or Twitter or a dating app. You\u2019re reading some overly-detailed breakdown of a sporting event, past or present or upcoming. You\u2019re playing whatever dumb game you play on your phone. You\u2019re trying to figure out who was invited to Ally Love\u2019s wedding. Or you\u2019re actually doing something you really like: reading for hours, playing a video game you actually enjoy, quilting in the quiet hours of the night, leafing through a new cookbook. It matters less what you\u2019re doing and more that you\u2019re doing it instead of what you\u2019d planned to do: go to bed so as to sleep long enough to feel legitimately rested before you go through it all again. You\u2019re revenge bedtime procrastinating.

The \u201C996 Culture\u201D invoked above \u2014 when employees work from 9 am to 9 pm, 6 days a week \u2014 is endemic in many of China\u2019s large cities. But the phenomenon of revenge bedtime procrastination is not, of course, limited to China. It\u2019s a symptom of workism and the burnout that accompanies it, which means you can find it anywhere where that approach to a career has been normalized. It\u2019s illogical and annoying and only makes things worse. But it\u2019s also what our souls do when we refuse to nourish them. They sabotage our most perfect intentions for sleep, because sleep is not the same as leisure. Don\u2019t get me wrong; sleep is great. It can be deeply restorative. But it also requires us to be, well, unconscious.

In these situations, \u201Crevenge\u201D or \u201Cretaliatory\u201D become crucial \u2014 and differentiating \u2014 descriptors. When you stay up late talking with friends of dancing or playing D&D, you are procrastinating going to bed, but you are also making a pretty good deal with yourself: the fun I\u2019m having now is worth whatever suffering I\u2019ll endure later. But most of the activities performed while revenge procrastinating don\u2019t really compensate for the exhaustion they cause. They might feel essential and non-negotiable in the moment, as some semblance of \u201Calone time,\u201D but they\u2019re really a double fuck you: they kinda suck in the moment, and they really suck in the cascading after-effects. You might feel like you\u2019re soothing yourself, but maybe you\u2019re just\u2026.punishing yourself? Refusing to recognize what might actually be soothing, or clarifying, or calming?

There\u2019s an argument that revenge bedtime procrastination is a quiet means of rebellion against your employer: they make you work too many hours, you claw back a few hours to yourself, which in turn affects your ability to function at full capacity on the job. You\u2019re single-handedly doing your part to pull down the all-important productivity rate!

It\u2019s okay to feel rage at the structure into which you\u2019ve built yourself. That structure might treat you as disposable, and you might live in fear of that disposability. But that\u2019s only true when you conceive of your own labor, your own problems, your own self-sabotage, in isolation. One person revenge sleep procrastinating? That\u2019s a personal problem. Whole swaths of a working population? That\u2019s a deep dissatisfaction with the status quo. Poke it a few more times, give it a bit more language to understand itself, and it might, might, begin to understand itself as early, bewildered form of a movement.

Do not ask for help to enact some sort of petty revenge! This includes telling a story and ending with "What would you have done?", "What are your thoughts?", "Any other ideas?" All direct and indirect requests for ideas will result in a ban.

Stories should be petty. I messed with their toothpaste. I turned their disk upside-down in their XBox. I gasp put shaving cream in their shoes. The more creative the better, (If you have a not so-petty revenge, post it in r/prorevenge!)

Your story should be about getting back at someone who wronged you in generally an interesting and/or funny way. To be pro revenge, your story should involve you going out of your way and going above and beyond to get revenge. If that isn't the case with your story, it may be better suited for another revenge subreddit such as r/pettyrevenge or r/maliciouscompliance.

No posts asking for ideas of revenge; all posts should contain a full revenge story. Update posts are only allowed if they include significant additional revenge; minor updates should go in the original post or a comment linked from original post. Moderators reserve the right to remove update posts if they are deemed excessive/not relevant.

Revenge pornography, also known as nonconsensual pornography, is a subtype of cyberharassment/cyberstalking, and a serious problem facing society in the Internet age. Revenge pornography can result in lifelong mental health consequences for victims, damaged relationships, and social isolation. Recently, a growing number of states have recognized the importance of this phenomenon and have enacted legislation that criminalizes it. The technology industry has also taken steps to assist victims of revenge pornography by creating web forms to request removal of links leading to the explicit content. The Cyber Civil Rights Initiative (CCRI) has been instrumental in promoting public awareness of this often overlooked problem and in providing services for victims. Although important steps have been made, greater recognition of the gravity of this problem and the mental health implications of revenge pornography is needed to expand legislation criminalizing such acts. A federal criminal law, in particular, is much overdue. Mental health professionals must understand the dimensions of revenge pornography to be able to identify and address the consequences in both forensic and clinical settings. be457b7860

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