Legally Blonde | 2- Red- White Blonde
Horrified that animals are suffering for the sake of "wrinkle cream," Elle takes the fight to the only place she knows: the legal system. But this isn't a murder trial; it’s a legislative quagmire. She travels to Washington, D.C., to lobby for the "Bruiser’s Bill" (a ban on animal testing), only to find that D.C. is nothing like Harvard.
But here is the thesis of Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde : The system deserves to be mocked. Elle’s inability to conform is exactly what saves her. She uses her old sorority network (Delta Nu) to mobilize a grassroots movement. She uses hair styling analogies to explain legal loopholes. She turns the Congressional office into a slumber party. It is absurd, but the film insists that absurdity is a feature, not a bug. Legally Blonde 2- Red- White Blonde
Are you a fan of the first film or the sequel? Let us know in the comments if you think Elle Woods should run for President in Legally Blonde 3. Horrified that animals are suffering for the sake
The chemistry between the cast members was undeniable, and they brought a fresh energy to the sequel. is nothing like Harvard
In Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde , the antagonist isn't a vindictive professor or a mean ex-girlfriend. It is bureaucracy. It is the apathy of career politicians. Elle discovers that logic and passion often get lost in the procedural sludge of congressional committees.
She wears a red, white, and blue sequined pantsuit to a congressional hearing. She wears a dress made of American flag bandanas. She accessorizes with gavel-shaped jewelry. The film argues that style is not superficial; style is strategy. When the stodgy male politicians are distracted by her outfits, she is actually disarming them. She uses the male gaze as a Trojan horse for feminist policy.