
Welcome to the matriarchy: ‘Galaxy 360’ goes full feminist sci-fi
“You ate a potato chip? HOW MANY TIMES HAVE I TOLD YOU TO STARVE?!” Welcome to Galaxy 360: A Woman’s Playground, where men are the eye candy, women are the overlords, and the pressure to be perfect is finally, gloriously reversed.
In her latest cinematic explosion, writer-director Anna Fishbeyn invites us into a world of glitter, power, and neon-tinted satire. Imagine Barbarella had a baby with The Rocky Horror Picture Show and then enrolled it in a feminist theory course—that’s Galaxy 360. It’s weird, it’s wild, and it’s exactly the kind of smart, satirical gender flip we didn’t know we desperately needed.
Flipping the script, in six-inch heels
“What if men had to carry the weight of parenting identity? What if they were judged by how hot they looked as dads?” That’s the question that sparked this psychedelic gender bender, born not from a film school daydream, but from Fishbeyn’s real-life experience of motherhood.
“As soon as I gave birth, the pressure was on—be the perfect mom, the perfect wife, look amazing, raise a genius, and do it all without a complaint.” Fishbeyn’s early play, Sex in Mommyville, resonated with women—but not men. Galaxy 360 grew out of the desire to pull them into the conversation, using laughter as the gateway drug to empathy.
A world run by women—and yes, there are commitment bracelets
The setup? Men are judged by their looks, paraded in speedos, and desperately compete for the approval of power-wielding women. The ultimate prize? A hideous, metallic “commitment bracelet”—the film’s answer to the engagement ring.
“It’s unattractive and terrifying,” says Fishbeyn gleefully, “a literal ball and chain—because for once, the men wear the chains.”
And don’t even get us started on the beauty products. From nipple surgeries to vomit-inducing diet pills, every absurd commercial in the film echoes the real-world pressures women face daily.
Satire, sequins, and social commentary
“Satire lets you laugh first, then feel the truth hit.” That’s Fishbeyn’s approach, and it works. The film is stacked with laugh-out-loud moments—but under the glitter lies a razor-sharp message about power, beauty, and what we demand of women.
“Women are constantly told to improve and perfect every part of themselves. So I thought—what if I made a comedy where men had to live in that pressure cooker?” The result is uncomfortable, hilarious, and deeply revealing.
The power of Illumina
Fishbeyn doesn’t just direct—she is Illumina, the fierce, fabulous pageant hostess who rules with sequined claws.
In one of the film’s most iconic scenes, she screams at a contestant for daring to eat a potato chip. “It’s ridiculous—but it’s also reality,” Fishbeyn says. “That’s what satire does—it slaps you across the face, and then it hands you the mirror.”
Movement 360: The bigger vision
Galaxy 360 is more than a movie—it’s the launchpad for Movement 360, Fishbeyn’s media platform described as “the new Netflix for women.”
“This isn’t just content made for women—it’s a world where women are the architects.” From sci-fi series to male beauty pageants judged by future queens, Movement 360 is unapologetic, intersectional, and joyfully subversive.
Upcoming titles? Try Vodka for Breakfast, Healthy Nuts, and How to Seduce Your Dinner Guest. Plus, there’s Illumina’s Cosmic Bootcamp if you want to sweat your way through satire.
Crafting new realities
“It’s not just storytelling—it’s world-building.”
Making the unmakeable
Of course, making something this bold came with pushback.
“When people saw sparkly speedos and bold female sexuality, they didn’t always get it. I kept having to say, ‘It’s a comedy! It’s satire!’” Eventually, Fishbeyn stopped explaining. She just made the movie.
“If it makes people uncomfortable? Good. That’s how change starts.”
So what’s next?
Oh, you thought she was done?
Fishbeyn’s expanding the Galaxy 360 universe with new shows, films, even a reality-style male pageant series called He’s Got the Look, judged by women from the future.
“This isn’t just art—it’s a movement. We’re reinventing the future with empathy, humor, and zero apologies.”
Final verdict: Beam us the hell up
If you’re tired of seeing women sidelined or stereotyped, if you’re sick of boring rom-coms and worn-out tropes, Galaxy 360 is your ticket to another world.
“This isn’t just a movie. It’s a feminist Trojan horse—wrapped in glitter, powered by satire, and ready to explode gender norms.” So grab your glitter, polish your commitment bracelet, and surrender to the sparkle. The future is female. And it is fabulous.
Bold visions in motion
Galaxy 360: A Woman’s Playground is currently making waves across the indie film circuit. Stay tuned for Movement360.tv and upcoming releases.