WATCH: Attorney General introduces affirmative consent reformBut one concerning act is never classified before appearing onscreen—worse still, that act is often glorified and romanticised: Consent, or a lack thereof, remains unacknowledged, despite occurring alarmingly often.It's the exact reason why Angelique Wan, who co-founded the educational youth organisation Consent Labs, is spearheading a campaign that could see "lack of consent" included in the film and television rating system in Australia."We inevitably get questions from students saying, '[Asking for consent] looks awkward, how do you make it feel normal and second nature?' And these conversations always come around to the fact that you rarely see consent role modelled anywhere, it's definitely not modelled in relationships we see onscreen," Wan told ELLE Australia.Angelique Wan (right), who co-founded the educational youth organisation Consent Labs.She's not wrong. While it's already common knowledge that relationship dynamics shown onscreen often set unrealistic expectations, what you might not have noticed is that some of these relationships appear to normalise problematic, and in some cases, criminal behaviour.Take The Devil Wears Prada for example.