by FourthBase » Wed Aug 23, 2006 1:41 am
OK, now we're getting somewhere. Thank you for the list, now I have about 50 films to add to my Netflix queue. Seriously, thank you.<br><br>Now...those movies don't feature gore, but they do feature simulated trauma, right? With the gore (if any is implied) happening off-screen? My concern still is that the trauma and off-screen gore is damaging our collective psyche (maybe you two have such rock-solid minds that you can withstand anything, but I'm talking about the general public, myself included).<br><br>I'm basically bringing up a argument that must be pretty common, that we're overexposed to horrific and dramatic stimuli, and that even though most of it's fictional (except for the news, which is still somewhat fictional of course), today's media technology is capable of making the fiction sometimes seem even realer than real life. Which to me makes the horrific stimuli more dangerous than the dramatic kind, simply because of the sheer violence -- which might be capable of making people suffer the violence as if it happened to them (bad), of desensitizing people to violence in general (bad), or of making violence seem attractive to people (worse). <p></p><i>Edited by: <A HREF=http://p216.ezboard.com/brigorousintuition.showUserPublicProfile?gid=fourthbase>FourthBase</A> at: 8/22/06 11:53 pm<br></i>