
Sunset Boulevard
1950 · Directed by Billy Wilder
Woke Score
CriticCritic Score
Audience
Ultra Based
Critics rated this 86 points above its woke score. Among Ultra Based films, this critic score ranks #67 of 1469.
Representation Casting
Score: 5/100
The cast reflects 1950s Hollywood demographics with no deliberate diversity casting. Norma Desmond is played by Gloria Swanson, a woman, but the narrative treats her as a cautionary object rather than a dignified subject deserving representation.
LGBTQ+ Themes
Score: 0/100
The film contains no LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The romantic and erotic tensions are entirely heterosexual, reflecting the era's constraints.
Feminist Agenda
Score: 15/100
While the film inadvertently critiques female disposability and aging in Hollywood, it does so from a fundamentally misogynistic perspective. Norma Desmond is mocked and pitied, not championed. There is no feminist agenda, only accidental observations.
Racial Consciousness
Score: 2/100
The film exhibits no consciousness of race or racial structures. It operates entirely within a white Hollywood ecosystem with no interrogation of systemic exclusion.
Climate Crusade
Score: 0/100
Environmental concerns are entirely absent from the film's thematic preoccupations.
Eat the Rich
Score: 25/100
The film critiques Hollywood's economic machinery and the commodification of human beings for profit, but this critique is cynical rather than revolutionary. It offers no alternative vision of economic organization.
Body Positivity
Score: 0/100
The film relies on grotesque imagery of Norma Desmond's aging body as a source of horror and fascination, with no celebration or acceptance of bodily diversity or aging.
Neurodivergence
Score: 0/100
Norma Desmond's psychological condition is presented as pathology and delusion without any contemporary framework for understanding neurodivergence or mental health with compassion.
Revisionist History
Score: 5/100
The film presents Hollywood history through a darkly cynical lens, but does not actively revise historical narratives to center marginalized perspectives or correct institutional omissions.
Lecture Energy
Score: 10/100
The film's moral pronouncements about Hollywood are delivered through narrative form rather than explicit preachiness, though the cynicism throughout carries a certain sermonic quality about the corruption of ambition.
Synopsis
A hack screenwriter writes a screenplay for a former silent film star who has faded into Hollywood obscurity.
Consciousness Assessment
Sunset Boulevard stands as a cautionary tale about the disposability of aging women in the machinery of Hollywood, a critique that remains potent seventy-five years after its release. The film centers on the deterioration of Norma Desmond, a former silent film star clinging to delusions of a comeback, and uses her tragedy to anatomize the entertainment industry's cruelty. Yet the film itself shares some of that cruelty. Wilder and his collaborators treat Desmond as an object of ridicule and pity rather than a sympathetic subject deserving of agency, which is to say the film diagnoses a social problem while participating in it.
From the vantage point of contemporary critical frameworks, one can identify proto-feminist observations about female aging, commodification, and the finite shelf life granted to women in visual media. These insights are genuine, if accidental. The film was not made in service of progressive consciousness but rather as a cynical dissection of Hollywood pathology. Norma Desmond is presented as delusional and grotesque, not as a woman failed by systems designed to discard her. The moral architecture of the film does not extend to her vindication or even deep empathy.
The broader cultural work of the film is to warn against the dangers of Hollywood ambition, a genre critique that transcends any particular social consciousness. It contains no representation politics, no engagement with racial or economic structures beyond the specific ecosystem of studio-era filmmaking, and no aspirational vision of social transformation. This is a film about corruption and decay, not about justice or liberation. It deserves its canonical status as a masterwork of American cinema, but not because of any alignment with the progressive sensibilities that would define wokeness decades later.
Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm
Critic Reviews
“No other motion picture about Hollywood comes near Billy Wilder's searing, uncompromising and utterly fascinating portrait of the film community.”
“The finest movie ever made about the narcissistic hellhole that is Hollywood.”
“Sunset Boulevard remains the best drama ever made about the movies because it sees through the illusions, even if Norma doesn't.”
“This brittle satiric tribute to Hollywood's leopard-skin past--it's narrated by a corpse-- is almost too clever, yet it's at its best in this cleverness, and is slightly banal in the sequences dealing with a normal girl (Nancy Olson) and modern Hollywood.”
Consciousness Markers
The cast reflects 1950s Hollywood demographics with no deliberate diversity casting. Norma Desmond is played by Gloria Swanson, a woman, but the narrative treats her as a cautionary object rather than a dignified subject deserving representation.
The film contains no LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The romantic and erotic tensions are entirely heterosexual, reflecting the era's constraints.
While the film inadvertently critiques female disposability and aging in Hollywood, it does so from a fundamentally misogynistic perspective. Norma Desmond is mocked and pitied, not championed. There is no feminist agenda, only accidental observations.
The film exhibits no consciousness of race or racial structures. It operates entirely within a white Hollywood ecosystem with no interrogation of systemic exclusion.
Environmental concerns are entirely absent from the film's thematic preoccupations.
The film critiques Hollywood's economic machinery and the commodification of human beings for profit, but this critique is cynical rather than revolutionary. It offers no alternative vision of economic organization.
The film relies on grotesque imagery of Norma Desmond's aging body as a source of horror and fascination, with no celebration or acceptance of bodily diversity or aging.
Norma Desmond's psychological condition is presented as pathology and delusion without any contemporary framework for understanding neurodivergence or mental health with compassion.
The film presents Hollywood history through a darkly cynical lens, but does not actively revise historical narratives to center marginalized perspectives or correct institutional omissions.
The film's moral pronouncements about Hollywood are delivered through narrative form rather than explicit preachiness, though the cynicism throughout carries a certain sermonic quality about the corruption of ambition.