Shallow Hal -
Yet, there is a generation of viewers who defend Shallow Hal fiercely. For many who grew up with body image issues, the film was the first time a mainstream comedy suggested that a fat woman could be the romantic hero, not just the punchline. They saw Rosemary as a role model: confident, sexy, and deserving of love. Despite the clumsy execution, the core message—look deeper—resonated. The short answer is no. A major studio would not greenlight Shallow Hal in 2025 without significant changes. The use of a prosthetic fat suit would likely be rejected in favor of casting a plus-size actor (like Barbie Ferreira or Danielle Macdonald). The hypnotism plot might be reframed as a satire of the male gaze rather than a literal magic spell. And the humor would need to punch up, not down.
The film’s logic is paradoxical: To teach us that Rosemary’s weight doesn’t matter, the filmmakers have to show us how monstrous she should look to a shallow person. For the first hour, the audience sees the "hypnosis" version of Rosemary: Gwyneth Paltrow in a corset. We, like Hal, fall in love with her radiant smile and quirky charm. But the film constantly breaks the spell by cutting to the "real" Rosemary (played by dancer and model Lenny Clarke in a body double suit), reminding us that this wonderful woman is actually "fat." Shallow Hal
In the pantheon of early 2000s comedies, few films occupy a space as simultaneously beloved and problematic as the Farrelly Brothers’ 2001 feature, Shallow Hal . Starring Jack Black in his first major leading role and Gwyneth Paltrow in a transformative fat suit, the film attempted to wrap a gross-out comedy aesthetic inside a fable about inner beauty. Two decades later, Shallow Hal remains a fascinating cultural artifact—a movie that sincerely wants to say something meaningful about looksism and prejudice, yet often trips over its own well-intentioned feet. Yet, there is a generation of viewers who
However, the spirit of Shallow Hal lives on in other media. Shows like Shrill on Hulu or movies like The DUFF tackle similar themes of looksism with a more authentic, less gimmicky approach. They understand that you don’t need a magic spell to show that beauty is subjective; you just need good writing. Is Shallow Hal a great movie? No. It is inconsistent, tonally jarring, and visually dated. The fat suit is distracting, and Jack Black’s accent work is questionable. However, is it an interesting movie? Absolutely. It is a time capsule of early 2000s liberalism—an era that believed it was enough to say "don't judge a book by its cover" without examining why the cover was designed that way in the first place. The use of a prosthetic fat suit would
If you watch Shallow Hal today, watch it with your critical lens engaged. Cringe at the moments where the Farrellys’ good intentions go awry. But also allow yourself to feel the earnestness. In a cynical era of ironic detachment, there is something almost radical about a film this nakedly sentimental. It wants you to be a better person. It wants you to love the Rosemary in your life.
The film’s premise is a high-wire act. The question is: does it land, or does it crash into the very fatphobia it claims to critique? Directors Peter and Bobby Farrelly built their careers on pushing boundaries ( Dumb and Dumber , There’s Something About Mary ). Their signature move was combining scatological, cringe-inducing humor with a genuine, sentimental core. Shallow Hal is arguably the purest distillation of this philosophy. The gross-out moments are there—Hal’s boss (Jason Alexander) is a lascivious troll, and there is a subplot involving a child with severe burns that walks a fine line between dark comedy and tragedy. But the central romance is surprisingly sweet.