— Carrie Fisher (@carrieffisher) December 29, 2015
As more and more people see the new Carrie Fisher has aged. *sarcastic gasp* Can you believe that? How dare she get older like every other human in history?
The biggest critique seems to be not just that Fisher has aged, but that she has not “aged well”. What that means exactly is anyone’s guess. Few similar comments have been made about her returning co–stars double standard. It seems men are allowed to age in this society but women are expected to maintain an unrealistic image of youth and “beauty” for generations.
Fisher, playing Carrie Fisher is a “fat” and “angry” woman now.
She has addressed these complaints and unsolicited comments about her body several times via her Twitter. In another post she writes, “Youth&BeautyR/NOT ACCOMPLISHMENTS,theyre theTEMPORARY happy/BiProducts/of Time&/or DNA/Dont Hold yourBreath4either/ifUmust holdAir/takeGarys”
One of my favorite Carrie-isms from this whole debacle is this little gem:
“I identify more w/who I feel myself 2be than what I look like. Either way, Am I obliged 2entertain U w/ my appearance”
No, Carrie, you’re not. It’s not anyone else’s business what you look like. You do not exist to be someone else’s eye candy. Your body is not created for their amusement. Be you. Be wonderfully you and continue to ignore the haters.
I’ve seen the film and I thought Carrie was perfect in the role. Leia was her old self, with some additional snark and wit added by age. She looked great, she played the role perfectly and I say she rocks just as much (if not more) than before. There’s just no logic behind criticizing her looks in the film. Some people are just mean and nasty for no good reason. I’m glad Carrie isn’t letting it get her down.