BADASS BITCHES, DAMSELS IN DISTRESS, OR SOMETHING 2025

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Key characteristics of the damsel in distress archetype include: Powerless: Damsels cant help but rely on outside help because they lack the ability or resources to solve their problems. Naivet: Despite imminent danger and discomfort, damsels dont let their situation discolor their sunny worldview.
a young woman who is in trouble and needs a mans help. (Definition of a damsel in distress from the Cambridge Advanced Learners Dictionary Thesaurus Cambridge University Press)
Damsel in Distress Characteristics: A princess or maiden in need of rescuing by a gallant knight. Cannot help or save herself, which is why she desperately needs a man (classically in a suit of armor) to come to her rescue. A dragon or some other type of beast has to be slain in order to successfully rescue the damsel.
Damsel in Distress Examples Rachel Dawes in The Dark Knight. Debbie Edwards in The Searchers. Princess Jehnna in Conan the Destroyer. Broomhilda in Django Unchained. Wilhelmina Scott in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. Snow White in Snow White and the Seven Dwarves. Kimberly Mills in Taken. Daphne in Scooby Doo.
Top 10 Damsels in Distress in Movies #1: Ann Darrow. King Kong (1933/2005) #2: Mary Jane Watson. Spider-Man franchise (2002-) #3: Princess Buttercup. The Princess Bride (1987) #4: Princess Leia Organa. Star Wars original trilogy (1977-83) #5: Wilhelmina Willie Scott. #6: Lois Lane. #7: Marisol. #8: Kim Mills.
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European fairy tales frequently feature damsels in distress. Evil witches trapped Rapunzel in a tower, cursed Snow White to die in Snow White, and put the princess into a magical sleep in Sleeping Beauty.
April ONeill in the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Olive Oyl in Popeye, and Lois Lane in Superman are prime examples of damsels in distressand those that young kids throughout the second half of the 20th century grew up with. Disneys stories have also been thoroughly criticised for perpetuating this trope.
The damsel in distress was an archetypal character of medieval romances, where typically she was rescued from imprisonment in a tower of a castle by a knight-errant. Geoffrey Chaucers The Clerks Tale of the repeated trials and bizarre torments of patient Griselda was drawn from Petrarch.

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