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Buffista Movies 5: Development Hell  

A place to talk about movies--old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.


IAmNotReallyASpring - Jun 08, 2007 5:22:04 pm PDT #9001 of 10001
I think Freddy Quimby should walk out of here a free hotel

Roth doesn't use the word "deserve."

Yeah, but he says "As far as the movie being misogynistic, that's just totally absurd. I purposely made these guys dicks at the beginning, because they get tortured for behaving that way" and that's a statement that implies he thinks their fate was deserved. Had he meant that as a simple A-follows-B set-up, I don't see why he would refer to the men as 'dicks' rather than 'men who objectify others' and avoid lending the whole statement a moral tenor.

But it is kind of traditional in horror movies for bad shit to happen to bad people because they're bad people, so I'm not sure how that necessarily indicates poor writing.

That bad things should happen to people who act poorly is a traditional aspect of horror I find to be poor writing. I find Roth, as a traditionalist in that respect, writes poorly. And as those last two sentence attest, I know a thing or two about poor writing.


IAmNotReallyASpring - Jun 08, 2007 5:41:22 pm PDT #9002 of 10001
I think Freddy Quimby should walk out of here a free hotel

ita:

Is the argument that no one deserves torture, but that other negative things can be deserved, or that writers shouldn't write characters that deserve negative things, period.

From my side, the writer should write characters and leave thoughts of what they deserve to the portion of their audience or readership that happen to entertain them.


§ ita § - Jun 08, 2007 6:10:01 pm PDT #9003 of 10001
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

the writer should write characters and leave thoughts of what they deserve to the portion of their audience or readership that happen to entertain them

Do you think it happens often? I see it mentioned that the writer should set their own interpretation aside and let the audience come to their own conclusions about stuff--but I think the reason it's mentioned so often is that it doesn't happen easily.

And I think that can stand independently from the quality of the finished work.


bon bon - Jun 08, 2007 7:03:36 pm PDT #9004 of 10001
It's five thousand for kissing, ten thousand for snuggling... End of list.

From my side, the writer should write characters and leave thoughts of what they deserve to the portion of their audience or readership that happen to entertain them.

leaving Roth out of this, I'd think you'd want to limit this statement more. It's like saying Oedipus shouldn't marry his mother in Sophocles' play because the playwright shouldn't determine what he deserves after killing his father. Crafting a fate for the very characters you are responsible for creating is an essential part of storytelling, and their "deserts" is a critical piece in that. The concept of hamartia is a fairly well-established one in art after 2500 years, I'd think.


sarameg - Jun 08, 2007 7:27:36 pm PDT #9005 of 10001

Can someone explain the appeal of horror/torture flicks to me, please? I'm trying not to be a jackass, but I read the moviespoiler thing on Hostel and was, frankly, revolted and appalled. I mean, I can read Oedipus and god knows what other horrendeous myths, but this goes beyond the pale for me.

Maybe it's that I can accept the concept (mythmaking ugliness) but not inflicting it on real people (actors.) Or...no. I can't even make that divide, honestly. I'm still freaked out by a mtv video I saw as a kid...


Strega - Jun 08, 2007 7:52:17 pm PDT #9006 of 10001

I don't see why he would refer to the men as 'dicks' rather than 'men who objectify others'
I genuinely don't understand why that makes a difference.

That bad things should happen to people who act poorly is a traditional aspect of horror I find to be poor writing. I find Roth, as a traditionalist in that respect, writes poorly. And as those last two sentence attest, I know a thing or two about poor writing.

I'm assuming the "should" there is deliberate, and I don't know where it's coming from. I didn't say "should." Neither did Roth. "Because" is about cause & effect, not some righteous judgment. The fact that Janet Leigh got slashed in a shower as a result of stealing from her boss doesn't mean people sat in the theater thinking, "Well, serves her right."

Like the man said, "Deserve's got nothing to do with it."

And to echo bon bon... An artist's opinion is certainly not definitive, but it seems a bit much to suggest that the artist should (or for that matter, can) avoid forming any opinion at all about their own creations.


Frankenbuddha - Jun 08, 2007 7:56:20 pm PDT #9007 of 10001
"We are the Goon Squad and we're coming to town...Beep! Beep!" - David Bowie, "Fashion"

Can someone explain the appeal of horror/torture flicks to me, please?

Well, can't say I'm fond of torture flicks, but I like (what I consider) good horror movies (and there is a differnce, IMO, even if it's comparable to ye olde pornography vs. erotica argument). I'm a big believer in catharsis: that which I see on the screen that scares, disturbs and otherwise shakes me up helps me deal with the mundane day-to-day a little better.

Honestly, the thing that gets me is that other than the WAY the gore is turned out these day - that is helpless bound victims vs. the stalk and slash variety - nothing here sounds that much beyond the original FRIDAY THE 13TH, which was SERIOUSLY nasty. Stalk and slash, when it was totally gory, seemed to me just as much "torture" as a bound victim in terms of the sadism in these movies - instead of some character making distressed noises while bound, they were making them while running or being caught unawares. I'm more curious why the MPAA has gotten so lenient on this, considering they cracked down after they let Ft13th slip out with an "R" back in the day.


Glamcookie - Jun 08, 2007 9:04:28 pm PDT #9008 of 10001
I know my own heart and understand my fellow man. But I am made unlike anyone I have ever met. I dare to say I am like no one in the whole world. - Anne Lister

I don't care how well-done it is, I'll never see a torture-related film. Ew ew ew. I prefer my horror the way I prefer my TV - all fantasy, all the time. Monsters? Sure! Ghosts? Hell yeah! Actual flesh and blood killers? Outta there.


Sean K - Jun 08, 2007 9:12:04 pm PDT #9009 of 10001
You can't leave me to my own devices; my devices are Nap and Eat. -Zenkitty

Actual flesh and blood killers? Outta there.

And yet? Some of favorite movies, even my favorite scary movies? About real flesh and blood killers. The realness of it being part of what made it good.


Laga - Jun 08, 2007 9:27:36 pm PDT #9010 of 10001
You should know I'm a big deal in the Resistance.

the MPAA has gotten so lenient

so very much this. I was appalled that (ferinstance) the opening sequence in Pirates III was considered perfectly acceptable for a PG-13 but if Jack and Will had fallen in love and kissed it would have been slapped with an R. (If they kissed as a joke it would still be PG-13 material) We saw Anakin Skywalker's flesh burned away in a PG-13 flick. I am aware that society changes and twenty years ago "bitch" got the same reaction that "cunt" gets nowadays and I wonder if The Cook, The Thief, His Wife and Her Lover would be rated R today no problem. Sorry for the ramble, I just realized I have no idea where I'm going with this. I just wanted to chime in that I think the MPAA is far too tolerant of violence these days while I see no equivalent relaxing of their rules regarding sexuality.