Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Films Today :: essays research papers
The British tabloid press is famous for jumping on any  bandwagon that supports popular opinion. Before her  death the Princess of Wales was hounded on a daily  basis for nearly two decades by the paparazzi to feed  the insatiable appetite of the word for her picture.  This lead, putting conspiracy theories aside, directly  to her death. Now these very same newspapers are  feeding the publics bottomless pit of an appetite with  stories of her life and loves. A day never goes by with  out some mention of her charity work, her past lovers  and even the dresses she wore when on royal duties.         Top: British tabloid newspaper The Sun  which campaigned to have all video  nasties banned for the sake of our  children.   Right: A graphic scene from Don  Coscarelli's Phantasm.    The only bandwagon that comes close to matching that of the Princess of Wales is the  effect that films, video films in particular, have on the viewing public. When The Omen  was shown on British television in the early '80s reports came in that people had to  seek spiritual guidance in order for them to come to terms with the images they had  seen on the screen. Some even reported that knives and forks had somehow become  bent and twisted as if overtaken by evil forces. Had their cutlery really become  possessed by the devil or were they attention seekers trying to get their fifteen  minutes of fame? The newspapers were quick to latch on and appointed themselves as  our guardians against the vile influx of film and video. Films were blamed for all of our  faults, it wasn't his fault if a man raped a woman because he was following what he  had seen in a video, and it wasn't their fault if children used foul language because  they had heard it in a film. But I have to keep asking myself one question; isn't it  about time that we took the responsibilities for our actions? If a man, or woman,  commit a crime then it is not the fault of some Hollywood filmmaker but the  responsibility of the said individual. We all like someone to blame. The worlds pollution  is the fault of the motorist so lets tax them out of existence, the fact that little  Johnny bunks off school and can't read or write is the fault of the teachers, or the  government, but never the parents who don't know how to control their own children.  Isn't it about time that we stopped passing the buck and admitted that WE are to  blame when WE do something wrong.  					    
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