
The Red Pill
A feminist's journey into the Men's Rights Movement
When a feminist filmmaker sets out to document the mysterious and polarizing world of the Men’s Rights Movement, she begins to question her own beliefs. Chronicling Cassie Jaye’s journey exploring an alternate perspective on gender equality, power and privilege.
- 7.5
- 2016
- Released
- 1h 58m

Alison Tieman
Self
Attila Vinczer
Self
Barbara Smith
Self
Ben Evans
Self
Brian de Matos
Self
Carnell Smith
Self
Chanty Binx
Self
Dan Perrins
Self
Darrah De Jour
Self
Darrah Lemontre
Self
Dean Esmay
Self
Erin Pizzey
Self
Fred Hayward
Self
Harry Crouch
Self
Janice Fiamengo
Self
Jess Kay
Self
Joe Manthey
Self
Karen Straughan
Self
Katherine Spillar
Self
Kristal Garcia
Self
Marc Angelucci
Self
Michael Messner
Self
Miles Groth
Self
Paul Elam
Self
Rachel Edwards
Self
Richard Cassalata
Self
Sage Gerard
Self
Tom Golden
Self
Vladek Filler
Self
Warren Farrell
Self
Ryu Cayenne
Domestic Violence Actor
Ingrid Serban
Domestic Violence Actress
Anderson Cooper
Self (archive footage)
Barack Obama
Self (archive footage)
Hillary Clinton
Self (archive footage)
Michelle Obama
Self (archive footage)


Released
en
- #politics
- #feminism
- #interview
- #equality
- #human rights
- #gender
- #gender roles
- #misogyny
- #social documentary
- #woman director
- #identity politics
- #perspective
- #misandry
- #men's rights
- #freedom of expression
- #gender equality
- #social & cultural documentary
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Reviews

It seems like most of the 1 star reviews on IMDb, from reading through this, didn't actually watch the film. Most of what they claim aren't present in the film at all, they are assumptions of what the MRA is and not what is stated in the documentary. And then there are entire reviews about thing that aren't even a part of the documentary. So clearly this is polarizing, but I haven't seen
Opens those subtle issues in the developed society which have always been overlooked First, it was so easy to understand. Interestingly arranged. Also brought up different views of gender rights. But, most importantly, it sheds light on gender discrimination against male. An issue which is always overlooked. It is accompanied with modestly nice graphics for a documentary.
As a documentary, it's pretty bad; there's little skill involved. As a primer on gender theory beyond feminism, it's alright; it gets the broad strokes right but fumbles the details and muddles the thesis somewhat. If it weren't the only documentary to tackle this topic, I'd rate it lower, but it gets a bonus point for its originality and guts. It's worth a watch if you care about human rights and
<p> Lets get this out of the way. First things first, <i><b>THE BAD</b></i>: It's a shame that Men's Rights have to be validated through the lens of a <i><b>feminist's</b></i> perspective in order to be taken seriously, <i>BUT</i>, at the same time that's the Documentary's strongest point.</p> <p> Men's voices are not being heard. If a man has a pro
"Cassie Jaye’s men, and by association the filmmaker herself, are not serving a greater good or inspiring discourse, but instead fuelling a social divide and dishonouring their respective genders..." Read the full review here: http://screen-space.squarespace.com/reviews/2016/12/7/the-red-pill.html











