For the record, I think comedians who pin their material too much to the cultural moment, are not that funny (whether that is all their material is geared to mocking political correctness or promoting it, or commenting on other comedians who do). I think some who do that can still be funny, but I think it tends to lower the quality of their work (Anthony Jesselnik and Dave Chapelle are both perfect and complimentary examples of that, where both of their recent specials, while funny, were less funny than their earlier work in my opinion because they were spending too much time commenting on our times). Some comedians can do that well, like George Carlin. Chapelle has always commented, but now I feel like I can predict the jokes.
That said, I am not bothered by screw ball 80s comedies either.
But that is largely who these concerns are catering too as well. I am not saying go back to doing outrageously offensive stereotype. But I do think this is more about white middle class sensibilities than anything else. And there is polling data that backs that up as well (that these kinds of cultural politeness issues are more a concern of well-to-do white people). I don't think any of that matters though. People have what sensibilities they have. I watch movies with my wife all the time, and she is from another culture. She simply doesn't have these concerns. If something is funny and breaks the tension, she says it. Doesn't mean there is any real meaning behind it. I find this to be true with lots of different people and it is mostly in middle and upper middle class white places where I see the sorts of concerns we are talking about being raised obsessively (people still have concerns outside that space, and have criticisms, but they don't seem nearly as focused on the minutiae of it). And obviously no group is monolithic.
Part of my issue with how stuff like this is talked about is characters like Ripley get downplayed because of the panties. We had bad-ass female characters. That isn't a new thing. I don't think every female character should be like that, just like every male character shouldn't. It is also good to have characters who are vulnerable or who balance strength and vulnerability. I am not particularly interested in aspirational characters (this is why I also have concerns about things swinging the other way, as I am not into either camps view of aspirational media). I want interesting characters. My favorite woman in cinema is Devil Grandma from Magic Blade. She is a terrible human being, who eats people, and I like that about her as a character. I don't want writers to be concerns about the optics when they make a character, I just want them focused on making characters who excited them, that their creativity honestly and genuinely takes them too. That doesn't mean I want something grossly offensive, but I also don't need a vessel for a lecture or lesson about society (sometimes that is okay but I don't need it every time).
I like wuxia and kung Fu movies, and there are a lot of strong female characters in those (especially in the 60s and into early 70s just before the kung fu craze explosion and in the 90s with movies like Wing Chun (which actually has a feminist message, and I think a great movie). I did a whole thread here on Cheng Pei-Pei movies here when she died because she is one of the great cinematic heroines. So I am all for strong heroines. And I am also fine with Ripley in panties too (I think in that case it was more of a decision based on the themes of the movie, but that is a discussion for another day). My favorite wuxia and kung fu movie usually have female leads (I am a big fan for example of Kara Hui films, Angela Mao movies and Michelle Yeoh movies, and Polly Kwan movies always make me laugh).
I also like new strong female leads. I was a big fan of Rey when the Star Wars movies came out. I liked that she was physically believable in the role (she has a very athletic physique that I thought added to the character). I didn't need her to strip or be in panties. She was very convincing because she clearly had been training for the role.
I just don't buy this 'equality feels like oppression' line. To be clear, there is nothing oppressive in my opinion about people changing something like phylactery. But I think it is a deeply flawed assumption that things can't go horribly wrong in the other direction. And I think it is too dismissive of legitimate concerns people are raising. Mary Wollstonecraft wrote about the need for striking the write balance when seeking progress and I think she was right. In terms of media, I don't want to exclude anyone. Period.
Or maybe we don't and just go back to making good art and following our intuition and artistic vision. Again, this mantra of 'do better'. It just sounds like moralizing to me. I'd much rather let people make what they make and be more charitable in my reading of it. If something is outrageous, sure, we can complain. But when we are at the David Lister level of calling everything crypto-fascist, I don't think we are actually making anything better