Yup, for sure, even Freddy. And Plan 9 from Outer Space and Deep Throat and the worst Steven Seagall movie. So, too, for Moonlight, Manchester by the Sea and Through a Glass Darkly. Superhero movies, too. Perhaps, the problem is with the word "commentary" which implies something conscious, wilful. But what I mean is every movie ever made is a product of its time and place and the movie reflects what is going on in that time and place in terms of values, beliefs, hopes, fears, and so on. Social change is reflected in movies--how could it not be? Just one example: do a study of Bond girls and you will see a change in attitudes towards women over the years. These movies aren't made to pass on social information but they ultimately do. And they have an impact. How would a Texas millionaire oilman know how to behave if he didn't see himself in movies? Consciously or not a movie provides clues. Quite personal idiosyncrasies can be copied from movies, too, without one even realizing it. I once had a habit--using a cold bottle to cool off my forehead after tennis--that I was shocked to see years later portrayed by James Dean in a movie I saw in my teens. So, what I am talking about is a kind of constructed social commentary that the makers of the film may not be the least aware of, that simply reflects the creator existing in the society of a particular time and place. That constitutes one form of subtext, and it is fascinating to explore. So, yes, a movie that depicts the humiliation of women for an hour and a half only to turn the tables in the last twenty minutes is making a social comment with it intends to or not. And I am at the point where I have seen enough of those whatever the hell else the director thinks he/she is doing.