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They make me very depressed and give me horrible nightmares. I made the mistake of seeing The Dark Knight. That was the movie that made me think that Hollywood doesn't want to bother with characters or plot. This movie had absolutely nothing positive or redeeming in it. The film was nothing but threats of violence, murder, bank robbery, explosions--yuck.
I refuse to watch any horror movies or extremely violent movies. Consensual sex scenes don't bother me. Violence or threats or violence do bother me. And they never show the aftermath of pain, suffering, social fracturing, death, and so forth.
They are sick.
Our society is run by insane people for insane objectives. I think we're being run by maniacs for maniacal ends and I think I'm liable to be put away as insane for expressing that. That's what's insane about it. --John Lennon
The basic thing nobody asks is why do people take drugs of any sort? Why do we have these accessories to normal living to live? I mean, is there something wrong with society that's making us so pressurized, that we cannot live without guarding ourselves against it? --John Lennon
Thich Nhat Hanh: We must also be careful to avoid ingesting toxins in the form of violent TV programs, video games, movies, magazines, and books. When we watch that kind of violence, we water our own negative seeds, or tendencies, and eventually we will think and act out of those seeds.
"I know the ludicrous search for the edge that seems to obsess all of Hollywood today. My joke is, what do you have to do to have edge credentials anymore, die? Is snuff the only thing left?…If there's a battle of filth going on right now- and there may be- I'm not against it, but I'm not a participant. There are no more sexploitation, gore, or blaxploitation movies…The reason you had those movies was because Hollywood wouldn't do them. Well, Hollywood does all that now."- --Director John Waters (Cecil B. DeMented) voicing his disdain for Hollywood in the September 8th issue of Entertainment Weekly.
"The evidence is overwhelming. To argue against it is like arguing against gravity," said Jeffrey McIntyre, legislative and federal affairs officer for the American Psychological Association, in the May 9, 1999 New York Times.
"What is inexplicable to me is how anyone with a brain would write, direct or participate in a film that promotes violence. They have a clear image of what a civil society is like. Why not spend your career promoting that vision rather than working against it?…The tragedy is it's the irresponsibility of artists that invites the government to take a position on artists. Freedom from censorship is very recent and fragile, and if you abuse it, you lose it." -David Puttnam, producer of Oscar winning Chariots of Fire, in the July 11 Los Angeles Times.
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