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=link= - My Super Ex-girlfriend

(Eddie Izzard), G-Girl’s arch-nemesis and childhood sweetheart, who enlists Matt in a plan to "de-power" her using the same meteorite that gave her powers. My Super Ex-Girlfriend (2006) - Plot - IMDb

Thurman’s performance is a masterclass in balancing the dual identities of Jenny Johnson and G-Girl. As Jenny, she is awkward and seemingly fragile; as G-Girl, she is

The success of My Super Ex-Girlfriend rests heavily on the shoulders of Uma Thurman. Coming off her vengeance-fueled performance as The Bride in Quentin Tarantino’s Kill Bill films, Thurman was perfectly positioned to play a character who blends physical prowess with emotional instability. My Super Ex-Girlfriend

The film rewards Matt by providing him with Hannah (Anna Faris), a "normal," non-threatening woman who admires his meager talents (his job designing salad dressing bottles). Where Jenny demands emotional honesty and passion, Hannah offers uncomplicated adoration. The film’s resolution—Matt defeating Bedlam with a makeshift weapon and winning Hannah’s love—suggests that the ideal woman is one who needs protection, not one who offers it. Jenny’s final fate—finding a man even more powerful than herself (an astronaut she rescues)—reinforces the notion that only an extraordinary (hyper-masculine) man can handle an extraordinary woman, leaving the ordinary man safely with an ordinary woman.

Despite its regressive surface, a counter-reading of My Super Ex-Girlfriend reveals the film’s unresolved tensions. Uma Thurman’s performance injects genuine pathos into Jenny’s loneliness. In the scene where Jenny quietly admits she is tired of being strong, the film momentarily glimpses the burden of female exceptionalism. Furthermore, Jenny’s acts of "madness" are often direct responses to Matt’s passive-aggressive cruelty (e.g., lying about his feelings, gaslighting her). Coming off her vengeance-fueled performance as The Bride

(Luke Wilson), an ordinary project manager who begins dating the seemingly shy and neurotic Jenny Johnson

My Super Ex-Girlfriend is a 2006 superhero romantic comedy directed by Ivan Reitman (known for Ghostbusters the character actually does those things.

The movie also serves as a darkly comic guide to breaking up. It externalizes the fantasy we all have when a breakup goes bad. "I wish I could throw his car into the river." "I wish I could make her computer explode." In , the character actually does those things.

Because the conversation around relationships has changed.

. She is depicted as a real, flawed person whose insecurities and neuroses are simply amplified by her invulnerability. Domestic Revenge: