The Boggy Nature of Fear
by Schizoid MannHalloween is a time of fright and fear. It’s a favorite time of year for many kids. Of course the candy helps, but that’s not all of it. It’s really about the feeling. The leaves are falling, the skies are darker, the weather is getting colder and there’s still more cold to come. It’s a time for spookiness, mystery and the unknown. So, as I write this, on a dark and stormy night, well, actually, it’s the afternoon, but it is very dark and very stormy outside. My mind turns to this season, to Halloween, to fear.

There are a lot of films that scared us as kids, and still scare us. Many of the films today are far too graphic for my tastes. Heck, most of television is, too, for that matter. So, I should say right at the outset that I’m not a fan of gore, not in any way shape or form. I know some folks out there are big on the stuff, but not me. Sure, I’ve seen some, the classic Herschell Gordon Lewis, Romero and Savini works, but none of the modern multi-sequel films that grace our theaters with single word titles. I don’t mind being scared. As most would agree, we all need a good scare every now and then. It’s good for you. It’s thrilling. But gore isn’t thrilling for me. It’s sickening. I like to be thrilled, I don’t wish to be sick. Besides, I’ve seen enough of the footage and descriptions of films like “Saw” and “Hostel,” which I rebel against, regardless of how “intelligent” or “clever” they are reported to be.

So, as I began to write this essay, as the wind and rain hit my window, I started to think on things that scare me. Matt Damon came to mind. Not because he’s scary or anything, of course, but because I noticed just the other day that the popular actor announced, quite out of the blue, that he’s not interested in working on films that have gratuitous violence in them.
He said, “I always look at the violence (in a script). I don’t want it to be gratuitous because I do believe that has an effect on people’s behavior. I really do believe that and I have turned down movies because of that.”
Wow.
I had to stop for a second after I first saw that, since I associate him with films which contain explosive, deadly violence. Right now, there are very few characters more lethal than Bourne for their efficiency in killing people to death, at least in the main stream. Obviously I wasn’t the only one who noticed the incongruity between his words and his roles. Damon’s statement that aside from Bourne, he has turned down many-a-script that contained violence could very well be true. I have to take him at his word, since I’m sure he receives tons of scripts every day that have him climbing, kicking and wrenching the feathers out of very bad good guys from Finland to Fuji. So, I asked myself why would he take this suddenly public stand? This was the first time I had seen an A-list actor, a very liberal A-list actor, at that, confessing such a view in public and to a news outlet, no less. Stunning. No other word to describe it.

Two days later, I saw a small news piece where Nicole Kidman was basically saying the same thing, not that she turns down violent scripts, but that she believes media influences behavior:
“Asked if the movie industry has “played a bad role,” Kidman said “probably,” but quickly added that she herself doesn’t. “I can’t be responsible for all of Hollywood but I can certainly be responsible for my own career,” she said.
Wait a minute.
So here were two very big stars, stating in no uncertain terms that media influences behavior, and can do so in bad ways, two days apart. This, after years and years of denying it and ridiculing those who believe media plays a huge part in influencing behavior, our culture, they come out with this. Two days apart! As long as I can remember remembering, I’ve read and heard from professors, media experts, authors, artists and filmmakers, from friends and foe alike that media doesn’t influence. Period. End of story. Get over it, etc.
To be fair to those two actors, they didn’t deny it or ridicule others, but their industry, Hollywood, has made that denial, that firm stance, the unmovable rampart against the charges that their product, their message is increasingly detrimental, that it’s screwing up our kids and us.
So, I had to wonder why would not one, but two big celebrities come out with very similar statements mere days apart. All I could think of was they want to be on the right side of the facts when some soon-to-be-released study by an organization embraced by Hollywood, such as Harvard, Yale, or Jon Stewart hits the net or news stands. Who knows? But, as I looked out through the glass at the dark foreboding skies, I suddenly remembered something. I remembered the recent news on severely declining box office receipts and DVD sales. I remembered John Nolte’s essay and all the others on the subject. And then it all clicked. “I know what’s going on here,” I said to my reflection in the window. Fear is what’s going on here.
Which leads me to something almost as scary as Hollywood actors making statements to the press. A movie that scared me with very little more than fear. No blood or violence or graphic anything. Just good old fashioned fear.

I’m not a huge fan of “The Blair Witch Project,” but I do give the filmmakers kudos for their idea, for their execution of it, and for their spunk. I hate spunk (No, just kidding, I love spunk, but I can’t hear that without thinking of Lou Grant’s famous reply to Mary). Anyway, the filmmakers of “The Blair Witch Project” mentioned some of the things that inspired them in their “fresh approach” to producing their now famous hoax film. Among the lot was an overlooked little film of the 70s. I had noticed the similarity of the film that they mentioned and their own hugely successful project right off the bat. I noticed it minutes into their wooded project. So, I was glad to see they acknowledged it at least.
The Legend of Boggy Creek
This little gem scared the dickens out of me as a kid. For those who haven’t seen it, I won’t ruin it, if that’s even possible, with any spoilers. But I will give you a very brief rundown of it, just so you know where I’m coming from and why. To a boy, it aroused tremendous fear; to an adult, I wonder about where that fear comes from.

The film starts out with a disclaimer that “This is a true story.” Right there, you got me. I’m already hooked. I’m not sure why that is – undoubtedly an expert psychologist can explain it with some long words that will take another expert psychologist to interpret. I’ll leave the business of that to them and just be satisfied with knowing it’s a swell gimmick with a set-up that can’t lose.
After a few dark, and yes, boggy images of a swamp, dead trees and scenes of late Autumn, a scene Andrew Wyatt or Charles Sheeler might paint on a depressing day, we get a young boy in denim overalls, the kind Opie would wear, and looking like a lot of kids looked in the 70s, running across a golden, sunlit field. He’s not goin’ fishin’ and he’s not havin’ fun. In fact, he looks terrified. We hear howls and hoots of various animals echoing off in the distance as he runs along. He makes it to a country store where the local gentry, the older men are sitting around chin wagging. Out of breath, he blurts out that his mama sent him to get help, because “there’s some kinda bayou man down by the woods and the creek.”
The men laugh it off and send the boy on his way, certain it’s just the overactive imaginations of mother and child. He runs back home across the same fields with the sun now setting and the spaces between the trees getting gloomier by the minute. Suddenly, he stops when he hears a sound echoing in the distance. We hear it too. It’s the angry howling of the beast.

In a narration reminiscent of Earl Hamner Jr., a comforting male voice-over describes his little town and how it was when he was a kid, that kid. The scenes are of pleasant fields, trees, and woods. It’s a picturesque though remote “neck of the woods.” Playful country music is used to make us feel at home, down home in this place known as Fouke, Arkansas, population 350. This, he tells us, is his recollection of what happened to that town back when he was seven years old. The comforting voice of the narrator goes on to welcome us in, in a neighborly way, describing the post office and the gas station, the school, garage, motel and a couple of cafes “where the men stop-by to discuss the fish they caught, or the duck, quail or deer they’ve hunted.” He then introduces some of the good sturdy folk of Fouke and how most are “farmers or ranchers.” Not exactly the kind that scare easily. Again, a good set-up.
He sums it up with the killer line: “Fouke is a right, pleasant place to live… until the sun goes down.”

What happens after that isn’t so picturesque at all. We get a documentary style format showing a variety of the characters, real or imagined, that the story presents as true. All sorts of recollections of dead animals, mauled hogs, pet dogs and others that were either found scared to death, ripped apart like rag dolls or just plain disappeared. The characters whose names are displayed on screen all seem trustworthy and basic, simple folk, not the kind who want publicity. And it’s all shot as if it came off the same reel as that Paterson big foot footage we’ve all seen.
We are then treated to a variety of episodes where the creature, the Fouke Monster, as it came to be called, terrorizes the locals in various ways. These “reenactments” based on our trusted narrator’s words along with the very amateur quality of the production add to its realism. Descriptions by farmers of 200-pound hogs carried over barbed wire, dogs and cats slain wet our appetite setting us up for the real big hit, which doesn’t really strike us so much as it dampens, like wet socks or a soaked sleeping bag on a camping trip.
The narrator further sets the tone with his ominous, “I doubt if you could find a lonelier, spookier place in this country than down around Boggy Creek.”

Sure, there are some sudden shocking moments, some classic fright magic, but it’s all a consequence of the set-ups we were treated to. Without them, the frights would not last much longer than the frames they took to show, which are minimal. The film really doesn’t show much at all, actually. But the implication of what is “out there” and “running on two legs” is clear and never far from our minds. A monster is stalking the woods at night. Is it man or beast? What does it want? Is it going to hurt us?

There’s no teen angst, no sex scenes and no hot tubs. There are no rowdy bullies who get their just desserts after picking on the cute couple. No car chases or explosions. No special weaponry or resourcefulness to make any. There isn’t even a gruff and disbelieving sheriff who always finds out the hard way how wrong he was to dismiss the whole thing. Nope, none of that stuff. What there is are very average, simple, vulnerable people in cabins or mobile homes, far from telephones or neighbors who all alone, or in small groups, get the stuffing scared out of them by something outside. There’s also fierce hunting dogs whimpering and turning back at the first whiff of the monster, motorists narrowly missing the creature as he runs across the road and more vignettes adding to the overall feeling of fear. There’s also a very odd musical segment that might very well be the scariest thing in the movie! The entire film is really nothing more than a loosely connected string of “documented” incidents described in a fashion not unlike a darker episode of
“In Search of…” (which by no strange coincidence was another inspiration to the filmmakers of “The Blair Witch Project”).

I saw this film with my brother and sisters. I was a small boy, not unlike the lad depicted. And even though I exited the theater into a hot, hazy and bustling normal afternoon in the city, bereft of anything wooded or rustic, I was still very anxious to get home as fast as possible. I was certain that the Fouke Monster, that “huge hairy creature watching from the shadows” was somewhere out there, behind a parked car or hiding in a dark stairwell waiting to rip my neck out like he did those dogs, which we never actually saw him do. I really didn’t see much, did I? But, boy did it scare me. And perhaps, sometimes, when the sun goes down and the wind howls, like the now all grown-up little boy says in the film, “and it scares me now, too”




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48 Comments
Hey Travis Crabtree!
Wait a minute for me!!
I saw Matt Damon in Team America so he must have said that after he was in that movie. But isn' t saying you won't do gratuitus violent movies the same as saing you won't do nude scenes unless needed for the story?
Great post SM.
Wow! This brings back memories. TLOBC was probably the first horror "type" film I saw as a kid in a theater. I remember the commercials for it on TV. Me and a pal saw it at a Sunday matinee with a boat load of other 9-10-11 year old boys who obviously saw the same commercials. It left a lot to the imagination and that's why it worked so well. Especially on those with over-active imaginations. I can definitely see the connection with "Blair Witch" though it never dawned on me till you mentioned it.
Oh, Schizoid Mann, you have written a fantastic column! I love your use of "feathers" and "stuffing" in lieu of cruder words. I, like you, do not consider gore to be entertaining. I do not enjoy sitting down with a refreshing drink and a snack only to look up and see a gory scene. Crime scenes and morgue scenes seem to be very popular just now – ugh – to be avoided at all costs. Whether romantic or scary, the good old imagination is more powerful, and more enduring, than graphic images on a screen. I still remember lying in bed as a child and overhearing bits of dialogue and music from Alfred Hitchcock's weekly show. Just that silhouette and music bring fear to the fore. Of course, as I age, the silhouette alone is terrifying!
Legend of Boggy Creek scared the crap out of me when I was younger. I hadn't thought about it in years
Cool post SM! I saw TLOBC with my brother and a friend we were in our teens, it was scary and funny at the same time. I forget who, but someone was on the toilet in the movie, and the person pulled back the curtains and there was the monster, my buddy screamed, that was funny. I can’t stand gore for the sake of gore either, boring. Matt Damon, hypocrite much.
I guess he didnt see "The Departed"? LOL Please..these guys and their comments are laughable.
God! How I wanted to see this movie when I was a kid, but never got a chance to. A friend saw it and described it to me, and just the description scared the crap outta me! He got to see "Dawn of The Dead" at the movies YEARS before I got it on VHS. I always envied his movie-crazy family. Wasn't there also a crappy sequel to this called "Return to Boggy Creek? With Dawn Lewis (Mary-ann on "Gilligan's Island")?
The very first of the Alien series, with that claustrophobic ship, that genetically taylored predator and that violent violin strike music score, scared the hell out of me at my fairly young age.
If you go here:
http://www.bfro.net/boggy.asp
You can watch it.
Mom and dad took me and my two brothers to see this at the Drive-In. It was during the summer time and 85 degrees outside. I'm in the back with the other two (both younger) when suddenly you hear turn-turn-turn, click. Dad turns around a says, "Clint what are you doing." Clint replys, "I'm rolling up the window cause I'm cold and I'm locking the door so I won't fall out!" We still laugh about that at his expense all these years later. It was even more frightening at the drive in.
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Alex Murashko Jr and Big Hollywood, Michael Chavez. Michael Chavez said: The Boggy Nature of Fear http://bit.ly/33Uv4V [...]
I saw The Legend of Boggy Creek as a 9 yr old at the drive in in rural western Ny state, and I am still traumatized. I've told all my kids repeatedly that it is the scariest movie ever made, and then I found it in the $5 movie bin at Walmart & brought it home to teach them a lesson. They thought it was hysterical, and I am even more traumatized now. They make all kinds of fun of me, but I can't help it. It's nice to know I am not the only one on this planet who was terrified by this movie. I recently saw a documentary about the events in Fouke, Ark. To this day I cannot sit by a window after dark.
The legend of Boggy Creek is the only modern day horror picture (if you can call it that and i guess you should) that I ever seen. I was a teenager in the seventies but never had any friends my own age around so I missed alot of this stuff. Plus i was so desoperate to get out of my "teen" years that I bypassed the musci, the movies and eeverything else the seveties had to offer. I literally grew up on The Band and Bob Dylan and watched movies like Midnight Cowboy and The Graduate. While the other kids were roller scating and girl fighting and calling every other boy they came into contact with "cute" I was reading Jim Thompson and digging on the Neville Brothers. Boggy Creek is a movie i never forgot. Would love to see it again
You can see it here: http://cinematedman.com among many others.
Yes, i can totally understand how they find it laughable, cuz really it is, the acting, the heavy handed narration, the amateur quality. But as you and I and many more out there know, it's not what they show but how they show it. What a lot of folks out there are only just catching onto, is that gore desensitizes you, so you constantly need more to do the same thing, like a bee sting. And like bee stings, eventually they can numb you to death.
I just think it's rather ironic that Mr. Damon suddenly decides to make such a statement, after all he's starred in and his industry pushes, as if the cat isn't out of the bag already. (I suddenly recall Al Pacino's great scene in The Insider 'the cat…TOTALLY out of the bag!" )
http://cinematedman.com
Always open for kids, young and old.
http://cinematedman.com
Always open for kids, young and old.
Haha. I learned a long time ago, that profanity, along with gore, work better, much better in very small doses. They really cheapen the language if overused (not to mention the over-user!)
Yup, don't get me started on autopsy chic, the CSI and clone franchises. Faces of Death remastered for the MTV generation. I know there's some fine lads and lasses here at BH who love those shows. I think they would be far better shows, and not damaging to brains, if they omitted the glamour gore scenes. Some fine acting in there, I'm certain, but I'll never see it, 'cuz I won't watch it. Ya gotta draw your own lines and make your own filters, letting in what you think is good for you and your life, because entities like the FCC, schools, studios and the public at large are failing at it, either by happy choice or fatigue. What it gives us is not a better product or more variety as some would argue (including Matt and Nic until recently, I'll wager), but rather a no-limits, no-boundaries environment equals nothing less than no quality. Brian DePalma might have been a great director had he grew up when his idol Hitchcock did and been restricted like Hitchcock was, by the two most powerful things in his filmmaking decisions, the Hays Code and his wife.
And now that I'm almost two years past fifty… I can't get enough. I listen to disco music, watch stuff like The Towering Inferno and Jaws. I grew up backwards! My dad always said I done everything ass-backards.. Who woulda guessed it … The old fart …was right.
You are so right. Just compare the two versions of Cape Fear. Robert Mitchum didn't have to spout gore and four letter words. That movie scared the liver out of me!
Oh sure. And folks are doing themselves a real disservice by exposing their brains to a lot of crap. It's like listening to music with your headphones up too loud. Pretty soon, you need to keep turning it up to hear it good. Then one day you realize you're at the maximum setting, eleven, and you can't hear it any more.
We've got a population of souls out there 'turning up the volume', so to speak, in other words more graphic and sadistic violence in their daily diet of entertainment. One day, soon maybe, they're realize nothing shocks them anymore. Is that a place they want to be? I hope so, cuz that's where they're headed whether they like it or not, and so is our culture.
If violence influences, then so does the f-word every sentence and gratuitous sex, but that doesn't stop them. Matt Damon proves he is an idiot every time he opens his mouth. He actually thinks he is smarter than Sarah Palin because he believes in dinosaurs but not God.
I remember a friend and I going to see this movie and screaming out loud, particularly the scene of the spend the night party in the trailer and the Fouke Monster trying to crash through the windows! Delicious fun!!
On the other hand, try to catch Mystery Science Theater 3000's riff on the Legend of Boggy Creek Part II. One of the funniest ones ever. The creature comes off as a Mighty Joe Young type…complete with a Little Boggy, Jr.
More and more I'm looking forward to your articles. This movie was great! Brought back memories. It too sacred me.
In line with what you're saying how Hollywood denies any influence. There's one movie that crushes that denial and that movies is "Jaws". How many people are spooked by the water because of that movie? I know people who are scarred for life because of that movie.
Another movie that scared me as a kid that didn't go overboard with gore was "The Car"! That car horn was scary as a kid. Great movie and under rated as Boggy Creek.
You bring up a great point. Also the joining of sex and violence I think warps normal appetites. Sex can be a beautiful thing and of course violence is bad, although necessary, depending on the circumstances yet most would like to avoid it.
When those 2 are joined together it "darkens" sex and it "lightens" violence. They blur together, opening doors to darker content. IMHO. Just a thought. If I made any sense at all.
While I completely agree with your view on what's thrilling and actually scary, I do have to say that some gore and violence does have a place in film. if it's used correctly it definitely enhances a story, but over-use and a matter of fact treatment of it cheapens the movie and pretty much ruins the story.
For example, Braveheart was a very graphic and gory film. BUT, it was necessary to provide the proper historical portrayal of medieval battle. I was not distracted by the violence, it simply made sense in that movieBut Hostel was a complete pile of cimenatic excrement IMHO. I got to about the first torture scene and had to turn it off. The graphic and disturbing nature of what that movie was, completely destroyed any story it might have been cultivating. I find that too often movie makers come up short on story and content and try to fill it with torture porn and vulgarity.
I saw this when I was in the fourth grade. It scared the crap out of me. I feared sundown for a year after that movie. I still think about this movie when I am outdoors at night. I saw the word "Boggy" in the title of this article and thought Hmm can it be?
I still recall my father's troubled face as he told about seeing the aftermath of a terrible auto accident. I wonder if the IV-administered graphic gore from today's tv, films, and news programs has altered our culture's perception of, and reaction to, such events. I have long thought that pushing the envelope until it is inside out and upside down, whether in gore, sex, rudeness, disrespect, or stupidity, is counterproductive to our society as a whole. Just because you can, doesn't mean you should.
Oh, yes, you did. Some of the most damaging in this genre, in my opinion, were the films in which the camera was the stalker. Where you saw the scene AS the villain.
Oh, yes, you made sense. In my opinion, some of the most dangerous in this genre are the ones where the viewer is put into the position of the villain. The camera sees through the eyes of the villain. The viewer gets to feel what the villain feels. Potentially, very harmful.
I still won't get over about ankle deep in the ocean. I like to be able to see blue plaster underneath the water. LOL…
So, I should say right at the outset that I’m not a fan of gore, not in any way shape or form.
I don't like Al either. And certain Congressmen and women frighten me in a way that Hollywood movies never can. Her complete lack of integrity, ethics, or intelligence aside, seeing Pelosi without her 6-lb makeup mask would be the top horror flick of the decade.
RETURN TO BOGGY CREEK was a sequel, yes, but it wasn't authorized by the producer/co-writer/director of the original. So he got pissed off and decided to make his own sequel, THE LEGEND OF BOGGY CREEK II — which, frankly, wasn't much better.
Well, I watched Evil Dead II with the wife last night and features (literally) waves of blood, some red, some pink, some green, some blue. And I really think they purposely didn't care about continuity (Ash's face goes from clean to bloody, to semi-clean, etc., without any reason at all). Of course, it's really a gory 3-stooges movie, so I love it.
That said, I really detest the amount of gore in movies and on TV. CSI got very old very fast (oooh look, we travel with a bullet through the spleen…again).
Scorsese, dePalma, and the other non-horror film makers who still seem to relish showing the hurt on people, I'm left wondering if there isn't something terribly wrong with their souls. Then they defend a Polanski and things became quite clear.
Yup. I think you hit on many good points here. I love Marty, he's a brilliant, sensitive man. Heck, one of his favorite directors is John Ford, for goodness sakes. So it is with some sadness that say, I really believe he's got issues when it comes to making his own films and what he likes to show.
To quote that old Bartles and James ad, 'we thank you for your support'
Oh, yeah. Jaws, (one of my favorite movies of all time) and literally thousands of examples more exist in Hollywood alone. Don't even include all the TV programming, shows, commercials, etc. It's boundless the influence we receive and act upon. I know it's not popular to say, the whole song lyrics bit and all. But of course music influences, too. How can it not? If it didn't, we wouldn't listen! I'm not saying you hear a song that screams "I wanna kill ya" will make you go out and kill, but I am saying, over time, media influences our inner voice like nothing else can, not our parents, not our children nor our books. (People often use the book example to try to put down the idea that media influences stating 'well, what about all the violence in old writing, books, the Bible, etc? How come that didn't make us all into mindless killers?"
To quote Tom Magliozi..Boooogus!.
Retort quick version: a different part of your brain is active when you are reading as opposed to viewing images, particularly with sound, where you're lulled into a trancelike state, very susceptible to suggestion from said images. The Soviets and Chinese knew this all too well in the Korean War. Too bad Hollywood as a whole won't take responsibility at least a little bit, like Matt and Nicole are stating publicly anyway.
Time will tell. So will profits!
I never saw the sequel which I heard was abysmal and fully deserving of the MST3K treatment. I'll have to check that out. I'm glad they didn't attack the original, cuz, like what Python did so brilliantly with Holy Grail, making it very, very hard to watch a medieval story with a straight face afterwards, MST3K, brilliant as it is, did make it equally difficult to watch some bad and semi-bad low bud flicks like Boggy. And even though I laughed myself silly, I can't forgive the guys for riffing on Marooned.
All good points. Yeah, the first person shooter and POV style of filming (Friday 13th first time for a horror?) was VERY effective and yet, like you said, very harmful.
Also humor and violence coupled reduce the impact. That's obvious, I think. But it might not be too obvious to many that humor, proven in studies, lowers a 'moral threshold' of acceptable behavior. So, for example, if humor is introduced, even in the most remote way, say, with a very short 'peppy' music bit, into a filmed rape scene, that rape scene can be watched by those who previously would turn away.
Thanks for the link but that site has the movie all divided up into Youtube 10 minute bits. Not good.
Go to The Cinemated Man. You won't be disappointed. Trust me.
http://cinematedman.com
I totally agree about music.
Personal story: When one of my sons was young, a friend brought over what we considered unacceptable CDs for an overnight visit. He knew that we kept an eye on what our son was listening to at home and that what he was bringing was not allowed. So, we simply "borrowed them" for the visit and gave them back before his mom came to pick him up. She had a hissy fit and refused to allow him to come to our home anymore.
Of course, as an adult, he has brought his own family here many times. Today, our son is a psychologist, engaged to another professional, and his friend, with two ex-wives and a daughter without his name, is living at home without employment.
I know there are myriad people out of work these days through no fault of their own. I also know that many responsible adults are forced to return home through no fault of their own. I'm simply relating a true story.
Agreed.
Thanks, Mann
You betcha!
Well, I don't think Braveheart was gorey. I mean, if they showed us the ending in living color, then I'd say, it went over the top. It creatively did not, yet, and here is the really cool part, they had the village dwarfs act out what was going to happen to him. So we had a very good idea of what they were doing. But we never saw it. Excellent filmmaking at work.
The earlier battle scenes, which I know you're referring to are not gore, in my opinion, just like Holy Grail wasn't gorey, nor was Saving Private Ryan, Black Hawk Down or other films which show violence or blood in an appropriate and discriminating way. They don't push our faces in it, like a cruel owner to his dog who just ruined the rug. They show us enough, only. Sure, they can do without it, but sometimes it's needed. And when it gets sadistic, then, I turn away. I won't be involved in it at all. Not my soul, not my brain, not my money. My choice. For others, go to it. Eat it up, if that turns ya on. But there is a price that will be paid sooner or later.
Right. Who's to say? But it is an interesting story.
Lol!
I guess gore isn't the right word for what Braveheart did in its battle scenes. They were ultra-violent, and there was a hearty helping of blood. When I hear the word gore, I imagine a visceral and gratuitous display of….well you know….
And I agree, the ending could have pushed that movie into the torture-porn arena, and they handled it perfectly. In fact I found it more disturbing the way they did it, without making me sick or forcing me to turn it off.
The movies in the torture-porn category have no such restraint or creativity. To me they are all cookie-cutter clones of each other and the creators of such films make me think they are all just trying to out-gross each other. I'll pass…….
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