With this understanding of how little men are interested in making the world safer for women and other gender minorities, it begins to become clear how disheartened we feel as a group with men who are choosing to do nothing on a daily basis. As we go on with our lives, how often are we seeing justice and actions to address the causes of violence around us? There is grief here from being let down by our fellow humans who make the choice to allow us to be hurt again and again. There is deep discontent and sometimes even hatred for men. The movie once again displays this sentiment brilliantly in a scene where the women are shown discussing their options for the future. One option is to stay and fight, quite literally with their lives and hence give up their lives; another is to leave the colony entirely and start over elsewhere. Here, one of the women suggests that maybe, they can ask the men to leave instead to which Agata, one of the older women present, played by veteran actor Judith Ivey, says, “None of us has ever asked the men for anything. Not a single thing. Not even for the salt to be passed. Not even for a penny, or a moment alone; or to take the washing in, or to open a curtain; or to go easy on the small yearlings; or to put your hand on the small of my back while I try again for the 12th or 13th time to push a baby out of my body. Isn’t it interesting that the one and only request that we women would have of the men would be for them to leave?”