Friday, September 5, 2025

Pleasantville: A Black and White Society vs. the Colors of Sexuality, Gender, and Identity

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David and Jennifer becoming Bud and Mary Sue

 



Movie Summary


Pleasantville
(1998), directed by Gary Ross, is a film that follows two siblings with contrasting personalities as they are transported into the 1950s family sitcom, Pleasantville, where the black and white world is perfect and everyone is happy. In Pleasantville, the siblings must either conform to the society's rules in order to fit in as the family's children, Mary Sue and Bud, or risk altering the universe of Pleasantville by accident. However, the more time the siblings spend trapped in the sitcom universe, they begin to learn that Pleasantville may not be as "pleasant" as it appears to be on the television screen. 

Social Issues

Jennifer, or "Mary Sue"


In the beginning of the film, in the real world, Jennifer is presented as a young teenage, boy-crazy girl whose primary focus in high school is obtaining the affections of the popular boy, Mark Davis. She conforms to a more mature/"sexy" version of herself as a developing young teenager who is interested in dating and sex, especially if it gives her a leg-up in the popular social sphere of high school. 

In the black and white world of Pleasantville, her sexually confident nature is what helps liberate Pleasantville from its societal oppression: their dull, repetitive and gendered lives disguised as "pleasant." When her brother, David, insists that Jennifer must play the role of Mary Sue—the conservatively dressed, innocent daughter—in order not disrupt Pleasantville’s universe, Jennifer says, “Maybe it needs to be messed with, did that ever occur to you?” Of the siblings, she is the first to notice that something is not entirely right with the town. In a way, her confidence to explore sex is what helps her come to this realization, and it is what empowers Pleasantville to begin changing, with the first sign of color taking the form of a red rose in the town’s black and white world after she has sex with Skip, Mary Sue's love interest, in the show.

Lover's Lane

Skip and "Mary Sue" (Jennifer) at Lover's Lane.
Lover's Lane, a hot spot for high schoolers to take their dates to, is a visual representation of sexual awakening that the teenagers explore after they are influenced by Skip retelling his romantic night with "Mary Sue." At first, the only tradition that Pleasantville's teenagers participated in that confirmed any innocent, romantic intentions between two students was the tradition of "pinning." Historically, pinning was a romantic 1940-50s tradition where a female college student "[receives] a [fraternity] pin from her special someone from a fraternity house" (1). In the context of the film, this gendered tradition is continued in a high school setting, with the male student handing out the pin and the female student receiving it. When Skip and Jennifer meet at Lover's Lane, Jennifer reverses the gender roles of this tradition by bringing Skip to Lover's Lane, "doing the pinning" herself, and being the one to initiate sex.

The first sign of color, a red rose.
As the high schoolers grow more curious and adventurous with their sexuality, Lover's Lane slowly transforms from an innocent "hand-holding" dating spot to a colorful, sex-positive paradise. The influence of Lover's Lane begins to spread to other parts of the town and its citizens as the black and white world blossoms with color. Notably, the first signs of color within the town are attributed to sexual imagery and symbols: wet red roses, red cherries, student's tongues, and more. 

The Colorful Woman


Betty, or “Mary Sue's” mother, is the opposite of Jennifer. In Pleasantville's society, she reflects the “ideal” woman of the 1950s. She's a wife, a mother, and her only purpose in the sitcom world is to prepare “nutritious” meals for her children and her husband, George. It isn't until Jennifer and her influence arrives in town that she begins to question her role as a woman within the family household and within Pleasantville's society.                   

When Betty approaches Jennifer about the sexual escapades happening at Lover’s Lane, she is confronted with her own sexual inexperience as a married woman. Confined to the gendered role she's been subjected to playing in the Pleasantville world, she represents a woman who has either forgotten what sex—and by extension, love—is like in an unsatisfying marriage, or she perhaps was never given the chance to explore her own sexuality due to sex being reduced to a tool for reproduction in a conservative, “family-friendly” sitcom world. 
 
Bill's window painting of Betty.

The question of, “What is sex?” is what drives Betty to begin an affair with the soda shop owner, Bill. Similarly, Bill desires to abandon his repetitive career as a soda shop owner to pursue his newfound passion for art. As the two fall in love, they discover the beauty of seeing and appreciating color in a black and white world, a recurring symbol of change in the film. Because they both desire to have agency in their lives, Bill helps Betty recognize that she doesn't need to hide the many colors that make up her identity, something that her "pleasant" husband, George, demands of her due to his fear of change. In the end, she decides to stay proud and true to herself, no matter how "unpleasant" she might seem to a binary, black and white society. 

Conclusion

Through color, a symbol for internal change—such as daring to explore sexuality, evolving from restrictive gender norms, and building the confidence to change one's identity—the society of Pleasantville can let go of their fears and their familiar comforts, and can instead look towards a better, more colorful future together. 


Works Cited

1) "Greek Life at MSU." MSUArchives, https://msuarchives.wordpress.com/tag/fraternity/. Accessed 4 September 2025. 



End of film shot. :)

3 comments:

  1. Hi Alaina! :)

    Your blog was the first one I read, and you covered a movie I’ve always wanted to see but never have gotten the chance to (I definitely have to check it out because I’m obsessed with saccharine depictions of the 1950s). The connections you’re making between color and identity is so interesting, and I love that in this interpretation this color is not a bad thing! I feel like most would assume in the narrative that a woman showing sexual desire and it changing the environment would be a “corruption” of sorts, but it’s a good thing, and it’s beautiful. Jennifer is such a cool character! For a 90s movie, not bad representation!

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  2. I've never seen this film, but you make some very interesting points in a way which makes me feel compelled to watch it. For a movie made so long ago, it seems incredibly progressive, and the connections towards sexuality are so interesting-- I feel as though we don't usually consider these details when watching a movie, but there is so much which goes into production.

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  3. This is a movie I haven't seen yet, but I think the ideas you bring up with color are fascinating, and its connection with gender and sexuality also seems compelling. Considering the film's age, I am surprised to hear about these types of topics in discussion.

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