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Pow! Bang! Crunch! Violence in American Cinema


Article # : 15490 

Section : SPECIAL SECTION
Issue Date : 12 / 1989  4,500 Words
Author : David Brudnoy
David Brudnoy hosts an evening radio program on WBZ (1030 AM), heard nightly in thirty-eight states and Canada, and is film critic for the Tab chain of newspapers in eastern Massachusetts.

       The hard thing about pinpointing a nadir in popular culture is knowing when you've hit bottom. Like knowing that you're in the middle of a Dark Age, as opposed to glancing backwards and saying “Ah-ha! Now that was really dark, by golly,” identifying the rock bottom while the trajectory is still heading downward requires a little imagination and a great deal of daring. Was it when the alien thing in the ocean chomped one of the guys off at the waist in Deepstar Six or, along those lines, was it when the shark gnawed off the leg of one of the goodies in the latest James Bond flick, Licence to Kill? And we're not even wholly done with the movies of 1989, so who knows what horrors await us by year's end?
       
        Violence, as H. Rap Brown said long ago, is as American as apple pie. It's also as Moroccan as pigeon pie and as Japanese as sashimi, but we're talking here about the American cinema, which all the world admires and much of the world's film industry emulates. English-language film, to be more precise, since the significant product from Britain and the stuff from Australia and other once-British areas are much of a piece. In our day the violence quotient, like the sex quotient, has been ascending with the same rapidity and zeal as the imaginative level and originality of plot have plummeted.
       
        Graphic Violence
       
        Generalizations are invariably tricky, much beloved by those who find themselves compelled to be neat about things but frustrating when the data are huge, as they are in discussing movies. Still, a generalization or two are called for. Here are a few: 1) The no-holds-barred spirit of the times permits--no, evidently requires--excess in ... (1998 of 27133 Characters)
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