Largo's Shark 00 Agent
Posts : 10588 Member Since : 2011-03-14
| Subject: Re: A Schedule of Superhero Movies Through 2020 Sun Oct 19, 2014 4:59 pm | |
| Disagree with him almost entirely except with the current state of Hollywood. God, talk about professional jealousy - forever bringing up that same Kubrick anecdote like a broken record. Tilting at windmills... Peter Bognavich's interview after the 2012 Aurora shooting was more enlightening. - Quote :
- Obviously, there is violence in the world, and you have to deal with it. But there are other ways to do it without showing people getting blown up. One of the most horrible movies ever made was Fritz Lang's M, about a child murderer. But he didn't show the murder of the child. The child is playing with a rubber ball and a balloon. When the killer takes her behind the bushes, we see the ball roll out from the bushes. And then he cuts to the balloon flying up into the sky. Everybody who sees it feels a different kind of chill up their back, a horrible feeling. So this argument that you have to have violence shown in gory details is not true. It's much more artistic to show it in a different way.
Today, there's a general numbing of the audience. There's too much murder and killing. You make people insensitive by showing it all the time. The body count in pictures is huge. It numbs the audience into thinking it's not so terrible. Back in the '70s, I asked Orson Welles what he thought was happening to pictures, and he said, "We're brutalizing the audience. We're going to end up like the Roman circus, live at the Coliseum." The respect for human life seems to be eroding. http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/dark-knight-rises-shooting-peter-bogdanovich-353774 |
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