Clueless vs. Kids
Micha Rinkus

The year 1995 saw the release of two movies that passed significant and seemingly contradictory social commentary on modern American teenagers: Amy Heckerling’s Clueless and Larry Clark’s Kids.   Where the former movie celebrates a teen culture of carelessness and consumption, the latter paints a world of rife with danger and self-destruction. Evaluating the respective meaning imbued by these two movies in the arbitrary construct of virginity, which simply means the passing from not having had sex to having had sex, reveals a non-obvious similarity in their social goals. Specifically, Clueless and Kids, while seeming binary opposites of modern virginity discourse, both manifest hegemonic attitudes towards girlhood that work to deny girls political and social power.  The fantasy world of Clueless, where problems of sexism, racism, poverty, and social injustice ostensibly do not exist, establishes Cher as a white, upper-class neocolonial ideal of femininity. This world allows Cher the privilege of romanticizing her virginity as bastion of power, though it actually holds no concrete power.  As Gayle Wald argues, this romantic construction of virginity comes from a “subject-position that paradoxically denies [girls] status as political and intellectual agents” because it attaches specific importance to female sexuality and purity that enforces heterosexual, hegemonic norms of male dominance.  In rigid virgin/whore dichotomy, the society that gives Cher romantic, imaginative control over her virginity disempowers her as soon as she decides to engage in sexual activity.  Where Clueless is self-consciously fantastical, Kids bills itself as “current teen reality,” which purports to subvert the traditional social paradigm.  Though filmed to look spontaneous and real, Clark admits that it was filmed in an attempt to “wake everyone up,” which points to an underlying political message.  Kids hypersexualizes teenagers, and portrays girls as passive holders of their virginity.  For these girls, sexual initiation is harsh, forcing them to reject romantic meaning attached to it.  In addition, the specter of disease and AIDS extends over all their sexual activity.  This tenuous connection of girls to their own virginity, and the direct connection of sex to death, disempowers girls because they do not truly have control over their sexuality.   Thus, both of these movies, one of the “teen movie” genre and the other a cutting-edge reality movie about teens, construct virginity in a similar manner that hegemonically controls their position as sexual objects in society.