The 1983 box-office hits *Flashdance* and *Risky Business* serve as cultural markers for the decade’s shifting attitudes toward sex, race, and the domestication of youthful rebellion. While critics frequently dismissed *Flashdance* as "softcore porn" or a superficial product of the emerging MTV aesthetic, the film actually pioneered the representation of a biracial female protagonist pursuing her own ambitions outside the male gaze. Conversely, *Risky Business* received critical acclaim despite its cynical, transactional depiction of teenage life and capitalism. The disparity in reception highlights a systemic bias in film criticism, where *Flashdance* was penalized for its perceived lack of realism and its challenge to traditional gender roles, while *Risky Business* was embraced for its "graduate-style" narrative, effectively masking its own moral ambiguities and exploitation of working-class characters.
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