Gender, Androgyny, and ‘The Dark Crystal’

The primary theme of ‘The Dark Crystal’ is that there should be no opposites, no dichotomies, no binaries. There cannot be balance when we separate out good and evil, ends and beginnings, cruelty and kindness, male and female. These things are truly one and exist together, inseparable.

The Dark Crystal Poster

The Dark Crystal Poster

Written by Amanda Rodriguez.

I’m at it again, reviewing a piece of media from my childhood that powerfully affected me in the hopes of determining what kind of message it imparted to my younger self and how that message helped shape the woman I am today. This time around, it’s Jim Henson’s The Dark Crystal. (My blast-from-the-past reviews thus far include:  Was Jem and the Holograms a Good Show for Little Girls, Splash: A Feminist Tail Tale?, She-Ra Kinda, Sorta Accidentally Feministy, and “No man may have me”: Red Sonja a Feminist Film in Disguise?) The Dark Crystal, like so many other 80s movies, appealed to me because it was dark, otherworldly, and told a story that was not only unique, but epic in scale. When I look back on The Dark Crystal, what strikes me most is the film’s complicated representation of gender. Most of the film’s characters are overwhelmingly androgynous.

The last gelflings: Jen & Kira
The last Gelflings: Jen and Kira

 

The heroes of our tale are a pair of Gelflings, the last surviving members of a race the Skeksis genocided to avoid a prophecy foretelling their downfall. In appearance, Gelflings are decidedly androgynous: they are small and child-like with smooth, feminine features and long hair. Both are gentle and soft-spoken; Jen loves to play music on his pipe while Kira sings along. However, being female gives Kira the advantage of flight because female Gelflings have wings.

Kira surprises us by using her wings to rescue Jen
Kira surprises us by using her wings to rescue Jen

 

Kira can also speak to animals and plants. Though that is a learned trait from her Podling foster family, women being able to understand creatures of nature is a common trope to denote femininity.

Kira marshals a pair of landstriders to help their quest
Kira marshals a pair of Landstriders to help their quest

 

Though Kira is physically the least androgynous character in the film, she is brave and sure of herself when Jen is not. Though Jen is the one singled out for destiny and agency with his possession of the crystal shard, he doubts his mission and himself. Kira must spur him to adventure. She also uses her wits and talents to rescue herself when the Skeksis try to drain her essence. Not only that, but in the final scene when the Skeksis are closing in, she sacrifices herself, using her own body to show Jen the path when he is lost. Kira is simply a hero. Her feminine traits don’t make her weak, and her possession of typically coded masculine heroic traits does not make her masculine. At the end of the film when the Skeksis and Mystics are joined together again to form the UrSkeks, one of them says to Jen as he holds Kira’s lifeless form, “She is a part of you.” This is true, especially considering their earlier Dreamfasting scene in which the two touch and share memories. Though Jen is male and Kira is female, their genders do not make them binary. They are stronger together; together they form a single whole. (More on that theme later…)

Kira sacrifices everything to help Jen heal the dark crystal
Kira sacrifices everything to help Jen heal the Dark Crystal

 

The wise figure of Aughra is also androgynous. She is clearly female with a woman’s voice and large breasts with protruding nipples, but she has a beard and curling ram’s horns along with a removable eye. The companion novel to the film, The World of the Dark Crystal, apparently identifies Aughra as both male and female, the essence and personification of the planet Thra in which our story takes place.

Aughra. Don't mess with her.
Aughra. Don’t mess with her.

 

Aughra is powerful, ancient, and grotesque. She commands the plants of the earth and holds the crystal shard. She is an astronomer, scientist, and prophetess who can read the future in the stars. She regards the Great Conjunction as “the end of the world…or the beginning,” claiming it’s “all the same.” Like the Gelflings don’t distinguish between self and other when it comes to male and female of their race, Aughra sees ends in beginnings and beginnings in ends. Instead of focusing on how things are different, disparate, and separate, Aughra sees infinite connections, sameness, and harmony in unity.

Portrait of Augra
Portrait of Augra

 

The entire journey of the film centers around reuniting a sundered shard to make the Dark Crystal whole again. This will reunite the sundered Mystics and Skeksis who were once single beings now separated, embodying binary, dichotomous traits with the Skeksis being evil, selfish, greedy, cruel, and violent while the Mystics are gentle, kind, peaceful, and generous. Interestingly enough, the Mystics and Skeksis are all male, and their combined form continues to be male, but their maleness is not wholly traditionally masculine in its representation.

The Mystics nurture Jen, teaching him the gentle magics of the earth
The Mystics nurture Jen, teaching him the gentle magics of the earth

 

The Mystics embody more traditionally coded female characteristics: gentleness, nurturing, community building, a connection to the earth: teaching, music, and magic. They’re long-haired and peaceful…the hippies of their planet (one of them even wears a stylin’ do-rag over his hair).

Look at those lovely locks flowing in the wind. Think he conditions?
Look at those lovely locks flowing in the wind. Think he conditions?

 

In many ways, the Skeksis are more overtly masculine in their desire to subjugate others, the grotesque way they eat, their trials by combat, and their quickness to anger and violence. On the other hand, the Skeksis are obsessed with fashion. Their clothing defines them, and the disrobing of our lead Skeksis, Chamberlain, is the height of dishonor and humiliation. They disrobe him before casting him out after he loses the trial-by-stone competition to be emperor.

The Skeksis are serious about their opulent robes.
The Skeksis are serious about their opulent robes.

 

Chamberlain himself is very androgynous with his high-pitched voice, slight build, and his preference for manipulation over force. The Skeksis are also obsessed with looking youthful. They drain the “essence” of Podlings, turning it into an elixir that they drink in order to temporarily rid themselves of wrinkles. This obsession is reminiscent of our own female-dominated beauty and fashion culture.

A disrobed Chamberlain trying to beguile the naïve Jen
A disrobed Chamberlain trying to beguile the naïve Jen

 

The primary theme of The Dark Crystal is that there should be no opposites, no dichotomies, no binaries. There cannot be balance when we separate out good and evil, ends and beginnings, cruelty and kindness, male and female. These things are truly one and exist together, inseparable. The film’s representations of gender give preference to a more androgynous, non-binary mode of being, insisting that gender and human nature are too rich and complicated to be “this or that,” “one or the other,” “either or.” As a child, this de-coding of masculinity and femininity that allowed characters to be so much more than a simple gender formed a piece of the bedrock of my lifelong questioning of gender roles, gender hierarchy, and the entire binary system of gender. Thanks, Brian Froud and Jim Henson!

 


Bitch Flicks writer and editor Amanda Rodriguez is an environmental activist living in Asheville, North Carolina. She holds a BA from Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio and an MFA in fiction writing from Queens University in Charlotte, NC. She writes all about food and drinking games on her blog Booze and Baking. Fun fact: while living in Kyoto, Japan, her house was attacked by monkeys.

7 thoughts on “Gender, Androgyny, and ‘The Dark Crystal’”

  1. Very interesting article about a very interesting movie! Thank you so much for this! So many great points.

    Another thing that really interests me but I can’t really remember, does the movie itself say that the Skeksis and Mystics are males, or do we as the audience assume they are?

    1. So glad you enjoyed the post! I don’t believe the Mystics & Skeksis are specifically identified as male, but their voices are male and male pronouns are used for both…

      1. Yes, but do they have DOCUMENTATION?! :) Yeah, I remember the voices but couldn’t remember about the pronouns. It’s been a while since I last watched it.

        Again, great work! This article will continue to get the wheels turning for me for quite a while.

  2. Literally this is one the reasons I love this movie, because it completely tosses the typical gender stereotypes out of the window. Even Jen is very different from most heroes you see in that he lacks confidence in some respects until he meets Kira, who really pushes him and believes in him and his quest and then he starts to grow in confidence and realize he can heal the crystal. Because before this you can tell that his hearts not in it but he’s doing it out of respect for his master because it was his dying wish. It’s very clear that his master didn’t tell him everything because it was his other self up the castle that was killing off the Gelfling and drinking their essence. One thing that really stood out to me the most in this film was after Kira’s sacrifice Jen is crying over her body, that was such powerful imagery as this came out during the 80’s and this was the hard ass macho hero faze of film it was very rarely that you saw men or boys cry in films as the message was lock your emotions because if you cry you look weak. Henson just said screw you to this idea and Jen spends a good three minutes of the film crying over Kira’s body and its shows just how much of a modern thinker he was, as he was showing boys and men that there is nothing wrong with showing emotion and crying over people who die and you can still be a hero and have emotions and not be confident. On the subject of Kira she is very much the star of the film to me in that she was so forward it was like the film in some respects reversed the gender roles because Kira is utterly fearless and never backs down she just keeps on fighting and she does not need to be rescued. You never see her cry on film though she admits it in the dreamfasting but you get this impression that she might cry alone when no ones watching because she does not want to be seen as weak, but also I feel that she is so focused on the quest because she seen her poddling friends and maybe family taken away by the Gathrim along with her real mother. It always makes me deeply sad when I see people snub this film because I think in terms of cinema its one of the best ever made and there has never been anything like it since.

  3. I got here through a typically convoluted drunken trail after watching Jenny Powell on a game show, and she replaced Lisa Maxwell on “No Limits”, and Lisa was the voice of Kira.

    I love this film, and I think your article is fantastic. Right now I want to go re-watch it immediately, and get pizza and Google Thai resorts. I mentioned I was drunk, right? It’s ALMOST evening!

    There’s a quote attributed to Plato:

    “According to Greek mythology, humans were originally created with four arms, four legs and a head with two faces. Fearing their power, Zeus split them into two separate parts, condemning them to spend their lives in search of their other halves.”

    I first heard about this from the “Hedwig and the Angry Inch” movie. I think it played at the start. So, similar, but different, themes. Love that movie too, but it’s a hard watch.

    I reckon that “Plato” (and that’s sceptical quote marks, not name quote marks) quotation is a lot of what fuelled the movie. The rest, the shaking up the gender roles, was pure muppet god magic.

    Great article that made me think… fuzzy drunken thoughts. Kittens!

  4. Great piece, I love this film too. I feel like it is responsible for imbuing so many kids of the 70s/80s with a holistic, timeless and ultimately countercultural view of the world around them. Its probably not going too far to suggest that the world has to thank this film for many of the radical things that happened in the late 1980s-1990s (at least in part. The rest of it is all down to the 1960s generation, which Henson was also a member of).

    I guess its unsurprising that there’s nothing like this film now in our increasingly conformist, defeatist world . Unsurprising and a bit sad :/

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