The field is wide, WIDE open for horror based on toxic femininity. You could use the most basic premises and it would feel completely novel.Fatal Attraction is 40 years old and even that movie portrays the man as a bad guy -- he's cheating. You can't do a modern toxic masculinity move where the woman is even 1% at fault. Imagine a movie where you have a normal, hard working young guy who>gets falsely accused of rape>passed over for promotions in favor of DEI negresses>finally has relationship was a fat 4/10 single mom>she gets pregnant again by here ex, lies to protagonist and flips out when he asks for paternity test>she divorces him, family court strips him of all assets>all these scenarios could be based on IRL instances. When the feminist grooming reviewers start shrieking, the writer pulls out the real cases he used for inspiration.Seems like an easy home run.
>>220587814Women don't like to be reminded of how crazy they can be so it's an obvious non starter from a studio perspective.
>>220587907They don't think "I don't like being told how crazy I am". They can do everything in OP post and literally believe "I am in the right and you are abusing me." There's no equivalent to men understanding they've done someone wrong and feeling guilty. Men really, really do not understand this.
Single. White. Female.
>>220587994>Single. White. Female.Are. You. Fucking. Retarded?
>>220587814I don't remember exactly what it was but IIRC back in the early 90s (I think) Alicia Silverstone played a crazy teenage bitch who was obsessed with some 40 year old guy and stalked him and set about systematically ruining his life, like fishing his cum out of the trash and getting it into herself in order to credibly accuse him of rape, etc. I may have the actress wrong but there was a movie or straight-to-TV thing along the lines of what I'm saying, circa 1993 or so.
>>220587814>Fatal Attraction is 40 years old and even that movie portrays the man as a bad guy -- he's cheating.I feel FA is a bit more layered than that. The blame for cheating is 50/50 (she knew he was married) but Douglas has obviously much more to lose and him being unfaithful would affect more people and deeper than in Glenn Close's case. Furthermore, we don't see signs of her obsessive nature and mental instability until he wants to end their relationship. That's where things start to turn and picture becomes clearer and clearer. You don't want anybody in your life who concludes that he was the "villain" after watching the second half of the movie. >>220589472Does this look familiar?
>>220587814The Baby (1973) does a really good job at portaying female toxicity without falling into any of the trite cliches you mentioned OP.