Folks, if you're one of the folks who sits and bitches about lack of quality tv (like I do), or (even worse), one of the folks who watched things like Everybody Loves Raymond and The King of Queens, you owe it to yourself to see Network over and over. It doesn't matter that it was written back in the days when there were only three channels to watch. It's still the best damned insight into the fucked up (yet still capable of brilliance) industry that so many of us rely on to either feed or anesthetize our brains.
Speaking of anesthetizing brains, Jeepers Creepers 2 managed to set a record as the highest-grossing Labor Day weekend film ever. That means that roughly 2,846,154 folks (at an average of $6.50 a ticket) plunked down money to support a movie that A) is a sequel to an incredibly lame horror movie, and B) is directed and written by a child molester (don't click on that link if you don't want to know what that asshole director has done -- potential trigger issues). Fuck all 2,846,154 of you with a chainsaw and/or your signed copy of the DVD of Powder.
Speaking of anesthetizing brains, Jeepers Creepers 2 managed to set a record as the highest-grossing Labor Day weekend film ever. That means that roughly 2,846,154 folks (at an average of $6.50 a ticket) plunked down money to support a movie that A) is a sequel to an incredibly lame horror movie, and B) is directed and written by a child molester (don't click on that link if you don't want to know what that asshole director has done -- potential trigger issues). Fuck all 2,846,154 of you with a chainsaw and/or your signed copy of the DVD of Powder.
(no subject)
Date: 2003-09-02 07:06 am (UTC)One more reason to never see JC2.
Un
(no subject)
Date: 2003-09-02 07:11 am (UTC)Thanks for the link.
(no subject)
Date: 2003-09-02 08:01 am (UTC)And THAT film did THAT? The only thing I've heard is that is't lame, unoriginal and completely conventional ! Why would that many peo.....
oh.
(no subject)
Date: 2003-09-02 08:22 am (UTC)Of course, I also don't hold his past against him (especially when it has no relation to his skills, good or bad, as a director).
Compassion and understanding means everyone.
Re: Salva
Date: 2003-09-02 08:47 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2003-09-02 09:07 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2003-09-02 12:10 pm (UTC)...i want to pay $6.50 for a movie ticket...
(no subject)
Date: 2003-09-02 12:18 pm (UTC)I can look at the art of someone who does something like that (Roman Polanski being a better example, as I haven't seen Powder, but I have seen and enjoyed a number of Polanski's films), but I can't always forget what they've done (rape and child molestation are crimes that fit solidly into my "unforgivable" book), and I certainly can't every justify spending my hard-earned cash on their stuff.
(no subject)
Date: 2003-09-02 01:53 pm (UTC)For my rational comfort, there are far too many "I don't believe in the death penalty, except for XY case." and "I don't promote violence but I'd love to see XY get lynched." It seems incongruous and bigoted to me to allow these kinds of emotional responses overweigh the idea (and practice) of compassion. It is difficult to forgive heinous crimes, and in my opinion, even the more important TO forgive.
(no subject)
Date: 2003-09-02 02:11 pm (UTC)I'm not sure how it's either incongruous (if I'm contradicting something else I've said, which I've been known to do, I'm more than amenable to clarify that position), or bigoted, as I'm basing my opinion on actions, not a state of being (if Salva was a pedophile who managed to never act on his inclinations, I could see the argument).
(no subject)
Date: 2003-09-02 02:16 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2003-09-02 02:27 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2003-09-02 02:28 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2003-09-02 03:19 pm (UTC)I'm not saying "everyone must be forgiven." I'm saying "everyone is worthy of forgiveness." It is a slight semantic difference and quite a difference in meaning.
The incongruity thing was a comment about my own philosopy, not yours - to me it would seem incongruous with my base life philosophies. To me, it is similar to allowing KKK to march as upholding free speech. I.e. "I support free speech, but those KKK guys take it too far."
And Salva served his time (whether or not the sentance is viewed as appropriate), he should be clear-and-free (probation/counselling nonewithstanding).
I don't see the difference of actions vs. state of being on judgement. I don't think there is a line there. You assume through this individuals actions that he is in the same group that you are judging (since you don't know the particulars of the case, nor the man, nor the victim): Criminal Child Sex Offenders. You judge the group on their actions and purport that to be OK. I disagree, I consider that very simillar to bigotry (to me). It is thus that I try to purge these group-judgements from my own philosophies and actions.
Perhaps that is why I react emotionally to these posts: It is a part of my emotional responses that I find to be in conflict with my personal moral code and find them distasteful. When I witness them in others, I am reminded of my own and react accordingly?
(no subject)
Date: 2003-09-02 04:24 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2003-09-02 07:12 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2003-09-03 04:11 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2003-09-03 04:33 am (UTC)I'm not saying "everyone must be forgiven." I'm saying "everyone is worthy of forgiveness." It is a slight semantic difference and quite a difference in meaning.
Fair enough. I think if you adjusted that slightly to read "everything is worthy of being considered for forgiveness" (which is a lot clunkier, admittedly), I could see it. Although I admit I can't look at certain actions (rape, child molestation, writing "The Bridges of Madison County") and see obvious routes to forgiveness, I also can see that someone might find the ability to do so.
The incongruity thing was a comment about my own philosopy, not yours - to me it would seem incongruous with my base life philosophies. To me, it is similar to allowing KKK to march as upholding free speech. I.e. "I support free speech, but those KKK guys take it too far."
Fair enough for the first part. I've always seen my thoughts on this as essentially, "I support free speech, but those KKK guys are still assholes."
And Salva served his time (whether or not the sentance is viewed as appropriate), he should be clear-and-free (probation/counselling nonewithstanding).
See, this is where I think we really disagree. He should be clear and free from a legal standpoint, fine. But we are all the products of our actions, and I don't see judging him based on what he's done (without denying him legal rights) as being wrong. To repeat the example I use in another reply -- no way in hell am I letting Michael Milken manage my finances, even he has paid his debt to society.
I don't see the difference of actions vs. state of being on judgement. I don't think there is a line there. You assume through this individuals actions that he is in the same group that you are judging (since you don't know the particulars of the case, nor the man, nor the victim): Criminal Child Sex Offenders. You judge the group on their actions and purport that to be OK. I disagree, I consider that very simillar to bigotry (to me). It is thus that I try to purge these group-judgements from my own philosophies and actions.
It sounds, as much as anything else, like a matter of differing interpretations of the concept of bigotry. I've yet to see any indication that child molestation is the sort of crime that can have pure "Les Miz" style motivations behind it. That said, if the worst thing that can ever be said about me is that I was bigoted against child molesters, I suspect I'll have led a much better life than I ever dreamed of.
Perhaps that is why I react emotionally to these posts: It is a part of my emotional responses that I find to be in conflict with my personal moral code and find them distasteful. When I witness them in others, I am reminded of my own and react accordingly?
I wouldn't presume to psychoanalyze you. :-) But I think we all have our hot buttons in terms of the types of comments that can set us off.
(no subject)
Date: 2003-09-03 05:37 am (UTC)And you see, the attitude that you have is the exact reason why people who have served their time often fall back on their crimes. They're not even given a chance to prove themselves despite having been punished by our compacted legal system.