“I have probably seen a lot of different versions of Barbie,” the 30-year-old from Berlin tells me. “Sometimes the film changes, sometimes I change. Different theater, different screen, different seat, different time, different audience. I liked some trips to the cinema more than others.” And each time, something different: “I look forward to every time Charli XCX’s ‘Speed Drive’ kicks in, and am completely overwhelmed when Billie Eilish’s thoughts take the film to a whole new level. The way Margot Robbie says, completely dejected, ‘I don’t control the railways or the flow of commerce,’ or the way Ryan Gosling’s Ken says ‘Mattel!’ as if he had made a great discovery and was now wondering what to do with it. There are thousands of these little moments I love.”
These details were not taken for granted by the film’s makers, either, as Billie Eilish and Finneas O’Connell tell the Letterboxd crew soon after winning their second Academy Award, for Barbie’s central thematic song ‘What Was I Made For?’. Asked what they put the ionate Letterboxd rewatch-response down to, O’Connell replies: “I think it’s down to a lot of things. A lot of people went into that movie expecting to see a spectacle and they expected to laugh, but I think Greta and Margot brought a lot more to that. When we went in to think about writing a song for Barbie, we thought, ‘Oh, this is so much more than we thought we were going to see.’ We were so moved by it.”
Eilish adds: “I think it made a lot of people feel very seen, and that’s very rare, especially as a woman. That really resonated and traveled the world: feeling seen and heard.”