"Honestly His Review Gave Me Chills" A Dad's Review of the 'Barbie' Movie Has Gone Viral

A dad's stellar review of the 'Barbie' movie, despatched in a group text to his family, has gone viral on social media. Here's what he needed to say.

Source: TikTok/@cobreezyy (video still)

The Barbie movie has been many things to many of us, with the emotional reactions ranging from unfettered joy to Ben Shapiro angrily setting Barbie dolls on fire. Ben Shapiro is not OK. Who will have predicted that a movie about a doll whose introduction has puzzled and overjoyed kids for many years may well be so polarizing? Honestly, I was ready for the freak-outs once I saw how a lot red was once concerned. That color is very triggering for misogynists.

One phenomenon I've witnessed on social media is a important amount of men seeing the movie with their partners, daughters, and once in a while by means of themselves. I'm not suggesting every guy was dragged to this movie, nevertheless it used to be essentially marketed toward women. What in reality stunned and thrilled me is what number of men liked this movie.

And one dad particularly gave it a stellar review in a crew text to his circle of relatives. We should offer protection to him in any respect costs.

Source: TikTok/@cobreezyy (video still); Getty Images

Margot Robbie would like this review of the 'Barbie' movie!

This dad's review of the 'Barbie' movie must study in schools.

Conor O'Brien, who goes by means of @cobreezyy on TikTok, graciously shared his father's review of the Barbie movie and I've never wanted to be adopted by means of a ordinary man greater than this second. In a group texted reputedly "out of nowhere," says Conor, his dad dropped an inspiring and hopeful take on this closely debated movie.

This is "too good not to share," says Conor and I could not agree extra. "I think Barbie is going to change the world," writes Conor's father. My eyes and ears immediately perked up. "We will think of life as BB/AB, Before Barbie/After Barbie. I can't stop thinking about it." And I, in flip, cannot prevent thinking about BB/AB.

@cobreezyy

I feel my dad in reality favored Barbie #barbie #barbiemovie #moviereview #fyp

♬ original sound - Conor O’Brien

He goes directly to liken this movie to a superhero movie however better as a result of she is "more powerful than Superman, Batman, Spider-Man, etc." The truth is, the Barbie character is absolutely shaped despite beginning the movie as a two-dimensional doll. Eventually she uses her "EQ, thoughts, senses, feelings, intellect, courage, confidence, and love," says Conor's dad. The not-so-subtle implication being, other superheroes don't seem to be as well-rounded as Barbie.

He places this movie into his most sensible 5 and all I wish to know is, what are the different four? Conor's dad then cope with the crimson patriarchy elephant in the room and the manner in which the movie takes it on with "surgical precision." In doing so, Barbie even "takes down the greatest movie of all time, The Godfather, as a movie men feel compelled to mansplain to women." It's true! Remember when Tom Hanks did this to Meg Ryan in You've Got Mail? I do.

What Conor's dad wrote took my breath away, and stunned me to my core. This wonderful man put his whole perceived masculinity on the line by way of mentioning the Barbie movie is a more profound and necessary movie than The Godfather, and should be discussed with reverence. Does this mean Barbie movie posters will get started doping up in every single place the dorm room partitions of learners dudes?

Things take somewhat a turn when Conor's dad suggests that Barbie is on the identical scale as JFK being the first Catholic president and Obama being the first Black president. That was once a lot, however I like his enthusiasm.

Source: Getty Images

(L-R): JFK, Barack Obama, and 'Barbie' director Greta Gerwig

Conor's dad is satisfied Barbie will remain in theaters for fairly a while as it actually "has legs." In reality, he plans on seeing it again. "Woe is the man who cannot admire, respect, and honor Barbie." A Barbie reboot of A Christmas Carol would possibly have Ken as Jacob Marley, warning some misogynist about his bleak and lonely long run using that very sentence.

"Men and boys thought women and girls didn't see through them," writes Conor's dad with glee. "Barbie proves they always have." I've by no means observed any individual so completely modified by a movie. It's exciting.

He ends the review with a little rhyme and a bit of reason: "All the king's horses and all the king's men, couldn't put Barbie back in her box again." Conor's dad guarantees there is more to come. And I promise I'll be there to learn it.

"Honestly, his review gave me chills," any person wrote in the comments, while every other noted: "He not only liked Barbie, he understood it."

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