Posted March 06, 2014
JKHSawyer: [...] What if you changed Rambo to say... Saw? Or something similar? You can see the victims fear and terror, the torture is drawn out, people can put themselves in that victim's situation as the people killed in that movie are random nobodies (iirc).
Yet look how popular those films are. There are 7 Saw movies and two Saw games. Lots of people like and don't mind gory violence, whether it's 'realistic' or Hollywood. [...]
The Saw series is very much in a niché-genre. Compared to your typical violent action movie it does not have the same same viewer-base and it's mainstream recognition is a fluke. I'm disappointed with how many people actually did go see them in the cinema, but still they are not big enough to show that people are indifferent or desensitized. I don't think a series like Rambo could reach mainstream success and acceptance if it made the violence as personal and painful as the Saw sequels. The focus in Rambo-like films are on the excitement and adventure of the protagonist surviving against impossible odds, not the disturbing and tragic nature of the on-screen violence. The Saw series on the other hand capitalises on the audiences' morbid curiousity and thrills from watching people go through nightmarish and painful deaths. The vast majority of movie goers are NOT comfortable with that stuff. Yet look how popular those films are. There are 7 Saw movies and two Saw games. Lots of people like and don't mind gory violence, whether it's 'realistic' or Hollywood. [...]
JKHSawyer: [...]
[url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8NMnnMRWJ-0]is everywhere. People give is pass, whereas rape makes people uncomfortable.
I don't know why some people mentioned real world violence, this argument was about violence in entertainment I thought, and you can still be desensitized to fake violence but feel sick towards real world violence.
Violence is everywhere, but we have created narrative techniques that disconnects fictional violence from common morality and empathy. For the past 30-40 years we have been perfecting the editing techniques, tempo and sound design to make ultra-violent scenes just the right length and just the right amount of detail to trigger the right response from the audience. All that shaky-cam and chaotic editing and scenes that barely last over a minute serve to get away with telling stories with ridiculous amounts of killing and hurting. Get the formula wrong and your film or game simply becomes mean-spirited and not fun. So long as we can sympathise with the protagonist (or hate the antagonist), violence works as a story telling device. [url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8NMnnMRWJ-0]is everywhere. People give is pass, whereas rape makes people uncomfortable.
I don't know why some people mentioned real world violence, this argument was about violence in entertainment I thought, and you can still be desensitized to fake violence but feel sick towards real world violence.
Graphic on-screen rape is virtually impossible to "get right", there is no formula to make on-screen rape pleasant to watch. It is hard to disconnect it from real world rape, ie it is hard to romantisise it the same way a protagonist with a gun or a "gangsta"-rapper can be romanticised. Rape is always mean-spirited, it can never be twisted into being "for the greater good" or self-preservation. Most people probably don't want to watch a single person bleed out over the course of five minutes while crying for his mother in shock, which is why action movies skip that part of the shooting. With rape, you show it all on-screen or merely imply the rape is happening. You can not skip or glance over some aspects of rape and still have a respectable and believable story. The vast majority of people would rather that the story teller leaves the rape and violation of a character implied rather than detailed, just like they would rather you don't show them how long and painful most shooting or stabbing deaths actually are.
People may be desensitized to "fake" violence, but I'm positive the vast majority of people living in peaceful countries are NOT desensitized to violence overall. People turn away when they see actual violence, and when they see fake violence that closely imitates actual violence they usually disapprove. "Fake" rape is more often than not trying to imitate actual rape because it is hard to skip the unpleasant parts and romantisise it. This is why "fake" rape never gets to enjoy the same level of acceptance that "fake" ultra-violence does.
Post edited March 06, 2014 by Sufyan