Violent Hollywood and the death of creativity
It used to take skill, even finesse, to create horror. It used to take serious consideration of how to present an act of terror, where it might lie structurally in the story, how much or how little to show, to what extent the event should be visited—or revisited. There were silences, pauses, teases and innuendos. Alfred Hitchcock was a master, but even less talented directors labored to get it right.
Now there is not only little left to the imagination, there is nothing left to the imagination. Show the guts, the veins—show the bullet traveling through a victim’s eyeball, show it all. Then, simply claim you’re depicting life as it really is. …
I don’t pretend to have any answers in the political debate about violence, but I hope the discussion will prod some consciences in Hollywood and elsewhere in the entertainment industry.
As filmmakers, we should ask ourselves: Are we doing the best work we can, or are we simply using the increasingly permissive marketplace as a cover to do work that isn’t even close to our best? These are questions that one can weigh without the risk of losing friends, being passed over for gigs or, worst of all, not being invited to the best dinner parties.








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Yes, you are. Most filmmakers are just mediocre talents, at best, with very little in the way of brain power.
ThePrimordialOrderedPair on January 18, 2013 at 8:45 PM
sock instead of talent is the norm in more than horror movies.
rob verdi on January 18, 2013 at 8:49 PM
Or, you could ask yourself which kind of movie makes the most money.
OldEnglish on January 18, 2013 at 8:54 PM
They are just bad movies. Stop going and force the industry to make better films.
lexhamfox on January 18, 2013 at 9:05 PM
Old farts bemoaning there’s no good music on the radio anymore, blah blah blah.
Un Chien Andalou (1929) they slice a woman’s eyeball open with a razor. Sure, they used a pig’s eye, but don’t tell me things have gotten worse. Oh yeah, they had porn back then, too.
John the Libertarian on January 18, 2013 at 10:28 PM