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Jonah Hill's recent criticism of toxic masculinity is spot on
Ellen / Youtube Ellen / Youtube / Youtube
AT THE BEGINNING of Jonah Hill’s career, he was often typecast in comedy films like The 40-Year-Old Virgin, Knocked Up and Get Him to the Greek.
Needless to say, Jonah has since established himself as an actor who can do so much more than that. If you haven’t seen him at his strongest yet, you should watch Jonah alongside Hollywood’s highest paid actress, Emma Stone, in the new Netflix limited series ‘Maniac’. The Guardian hailed it has the best acting that Hill has displayed in his career to date.
Jonah also just wrapped up his directorial debut on a new movie called Mid90s, which Ellen DeGeneres was in awe of.
Ellen said that she could not believe that it was Hill’s first movie. Far from the comedies Jonah Hill has starred in himself and vaguely reminiscent of Harmony Korine’s ‘Kids’, Mid90s follows a troubled 13-year-old growing up in Los Angeles in the 1990s, as he finds a place for himself within a group of older skateboarders.
Ahead of the movie’s release, Jonah Hill prepared a zine called ‘Inner Children’.
Ellen / Youtube Ellen / Youtube / Youtube
The conversation turned to Inner Children, and Ellen asked Jonah what his motivation for creating the zine was. He said:
Jonah said that his own ‘snapshot’ that sticks with him is his overweight 14-year-old self. He struggled to fit in with the skaters and hip hop kids of his generation, which made him feel lonely and unable to understand his own worth. Jonah decided to dedicate the magazine to his 14-year-old self. Reading the manifesto of Inner Children, Jonah told Ellen’s studio audience:
Jonah’s aim with the zine was to ask twelve people he admired if they could relate to his feelings about the ‘snapshot’, and the project resulted in some of the most meaningful conversations he has ever had.
Ellen / Youtube Ellen / Youtube / Youtube
Jonah said that working on this zine and his new movie helped him to become comfortable with himself, and present himself to the world in a way that is honest. He no longer feels like he is pretending to be something that he is not.
Ellen pointed out that many actors and actresses enter the business to find approval and love.
Jonah quipped that, like everybody else, he’s “under construction”. It wasn’t an easy journey for him, but he finally feels confident in himself and free. The conversation came back to Stevie, the protagonist in Hill’s new movie.
Jonah then said that to make the film as authentic as possible, he had to hold a mirror up to the culture of toxic masculinity that surrounded him and many other young men during the 1990s and early 2000s.
The 34-year-old said it was deliberately uncomfortable because he thought it would be “more offensive to revise history”.
Despite the fact that the child in the movie is visibly terrified and uncomfortable when a sexual opportunity presents itself, he still feels as if he has to participate. Jonah explained why:
Jonah explained that he wants the current generation to learn from the mistake of previous generations.
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jonah hill Under Construction