scotthm said:
Cary L. Brown said:
scotthm said:
igrokbok said:
I get no "entertainment" from seeing blood spurt or bones penetrate flesh.
I agree 100%, but there are, unfortunately, a great many people who enjoy watching others suffer.
I sure hope that you guys aren't relating what I, and others, have been saying to "enjoying watching people suffer."
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That's actually a pretty offensive comment, if that's what you're saying.
If what I said doesn't apply to you then you have no reason to be offended.
Nevertheless, there is a whole genre of film devoted to torture and murder and I suspect many of the people wanting violent harm portrayed more 'realistically' in
Star Trek also enjoy such films as
Saw and
Hostel, etc. Not that I think
Star Trek is headed in that direction, but I say just nip that idea in the bud.
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For the record, I haven't seen either "Saw" or Hostel. The only "horror" films I ever really enjoyed have been:
1) The Thing
2) At some weird level, the Freddy Krueger stuff (but that's because Freddy is such a totally tongue-in-cheek character...)
3) The "Resident Evil" films (not due to the gore but due to the sheer "fun level," plus I have to admit I'm SOOOO into Mila

4) Sean of the Dead (same as above on the "fun level" bit... shame there's no Mila in it!)
Oddly, none of those are all THAT explicitly gory... the Freddy Krueger stuff isn't really GORY so much as just over-the-top, SILLY stuff (800 gallons of blood out of a body? Phones that sprout tongues? Ya CAN'T take that stuff seriously! Still, I haven't seen any of those in many, many years.)
The Thing is "gory" in a sense... except it's not really GORE for the most when we see it (Okay, having a guy's head come off his body, grow legs, and crawl away to a corner is grotesque, but it's not "harm coming to other people" per-se).
Sean of the Dead is just silly.. and even as such, the only really GROSS bit is over-the-top in a very silly way... (Involving David and a window...)
And as for R:E... well, considering the thematic material, it's not nearly as explicit as it might have been... yes, there's zombie makeup and some cool CGI slime-monsters, but you don't see the sort of REALISTIC injury stuff we're talking about here.
I have NO INTEREST in seeing "Saw" or "Hostel" because I see no point to those films whatsoever, except to watch people suffer. I saw a few of the "Friday the 13th" flicks when I was a kid... and I didn't like 'em, because they were pointless violence (though it was vaguely amusing, once you realized that 13 kids died in every movie, to "keep score" at the theater with a group of rowdy friends.)
But MASH... just for example... showed the impact of injuries in a realistic way without resorting to having to show gore. I think that MASH, or some of the better recent WWII films/series ("Band of Brothers" comes to mind) are good references for how this ought to be handled.