Those children were not hypersexualized. They had no idea what they were doing. The dance training scene gives it away. Robotic, stiff movements, breaking into giggles at the absurdity of it all, they might as well have been playing big booty at a church camp
When the lead character pushed harder and tried to up the ante by making dances more risque, the other girls backed away. They didn't want to do strip club moves, they just wanted to dance. They pushed the lead girl out when she turned it into something dangerous.
To the other girls it was a hobby, to the MC it was a way out of metaphorical prison, so of course she'd do things the other girls never would including assault and theft. Signal > noise and none of you get it. The movie is an outright rebuttal of islam and religions that portray women as unclean.
At the end of the movie, the MC's mom admits her daughter still has a chance to get out. The whole movie is about freedom and how far even a child would be willing to go for it.
BTW, my wife was never hyper sexualized. When she was in middle school parents put her in boys spongebob shirts and pants no girl should ever wear, which ruined her self esteem and made her a joke at school. Her mom shaved her head because she found her hair unmanageable. She had PCOS and her parents did nothing to help her medically. Any time my wife showed interest in anything remotely girly her parents told her she wasn't really like that and to shut up.
Let's not forget in the midst of a hoax pandemic and the left plotting voter fraud, the most brilliant conservative minds and talking heads were busy reeeeeing over Cuties. They literally blinded most all right leaning folk into virtue signaling over a direct to streaming movie while literal tyranny and corruption was happening world wide
Those children were not hypersexualized. They had no idea what they were doing. The dance training scene gives it away. Robotic, stiff movements, breaking into giggles at the absurdity of it all, they might as well have been playing big booty at a church camp
When the lead character pushed harder and tried to up the ante by making dances more risque, the other girls backed away. They didn't want to do strip club moves, they just wanted to dance. They pushed the lead girl out when she turned it into something dangerous.
To the other girls it was a hobby, to the MC it was a way out of metaphorical prison, so of course she'd do things the other girls never would including assault and theft. Signal > noise and none of you get it. The movie is an outright rebuttal of islam and religions that portray women as unclean.
At the end of the movie, the MC's mom admits her daughter still has a chance to get out. The whole movie is about freedom and how far even a child would be willing to go for it.
BTW, my wife was never hyper sexualized. When she was in middle school parents put her in boys spongebob shirts and pants no girl should ever wear, which ruined her self esteem and made her a joke at school. Her mom shaved her head because she found her hair unmanageable. She had PCOS and her parents did nothing to help her medically. Any time my wife showed interest in anything remotely girly her parents told her she wasn't really like that and to shut up.