Posted on 05/20/2018 6:21:33 PM PDT by EdnaMode
Down at the beach, every other trash can is wrapped in what suddenly seems an unnerving image, given the recent school shootings, including last weeks in Texas. Theres baby-faced Alden Ehrenreich, as Han Solo in Solo: A Star Wars Story from Lucsfilm and Disney, aiming squarely at the viewer with an outsized handgun (and it is exactly that, whatever fantasy blast it is presumed to emit in the latest installment of the sci-fi epic). Just below, a smiling Emilia Clark, as Qira, clutches a double-barreled pistol. They are flanked by Joonas Suotamo, Chewbacca, who totes the space equivalent of an assault rifle, and wears a bandolier full of loads that will blow the lot of them to the next nebula if he takes a hit.
Its all great, PG 13-rated fun, and were used to it. Movie violence is one thing. The real-life kind is another.
But Hollywood might do well to check its messaging in the face of fresh demands for new curbs on gun ownership, fed in no small part by activist celebrities like Ashley Judd and Morgan Freeman.
In the current spring-summer season, every major studio is selling one or more films with posters, billboards, promotional photos or trailers featuring big guns. Warner led the way in April with Rampage, a PG-13 film in which Dwayne Johnsons battle to save Chicago from animal mutants, involved heavy firepower (though our hero ultimately solved his problem with love and science). This weekend brings Deadpool 2 from Fox, with one of my favorite marketing imagesa cartoon Ryan Reynolds, blasting away on the back of a unicorn, on a poster for the Imax version.
But dont worry, its rated R. Still, kids dont need a ticket to get the idea.
Columbias summer offerings include the R-rated Equalizer 2. Universal will have The First Purge. Paramount weighs in with Mission: Impossible-Fallout. At last check, the last two were still unrated. But anyone with an Internet connection can already see the gun fun in all three.
Again, anyone who suggests that film violence translates into real violence is over-simplifying a vastly complicated equation. A few years ago, my former New York Times colleague Brooks Barnes and I tried to illustrate that point by contrasting the violent entertainment and role-playing at San Diegos Comic-con International with actual behavior. In San Diego, the level of municipal violence usually declines during the weapons-obsessed convention.
But anyone who doesnt think parents and activists are poised for a fresh assault on Hollywoods approach to screen violence is probably dreaming. Only last Monday, four days before the shootings at Santa Fe High School in Texas, the Annenberg Public Policy Center at the University of Pennsylvania issued a call for a new, PG-15 violence rating, and bolstered it with a study being published in the journal Pediatrics.
That demand for tighter control of violent entertainment likely wont be the last. And those who would like to avoid a replay of the almost-forgotten Senate hearing of 18 years ago, when stuttering and stammering film moguls were pounded, on-camera, by grand-standing politicians, might do well to clean up the gun imagery on those trash cans at the beach.
If so, how can they complain when you see alcohol being consumed, cigarette smoking, even the occasional mammary? These would be immediately censored, wouldn't they?
Liberal hypocrite ant-gun actors earning their salaries by starring in movies using guns.
If these idiots were serious, they would DEMAND #GunFreeHollywood.....
“...Chewbacca, who totes the space equivalent of an assault rifle, and wears a bandolier full of loads that will blow the lot of them to the next nebula if he takes a hit.”
That would be new because Chewi’s bandolier usually was claimed to be some sort of sash representing some position he held among Wookies.
Then again, there are other Star Wars sources that say otherwise: https://scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/17482/what-purpose-does-chewbaccas-belt-serve
Maybe Michelle Obama could clarify.
Every one of our Social Justice Warriors in Hollyweird must have signed a No Guns pledge by now? Right?
I trust theyve all pledged to NEVER handle a gun of any sort, from a musket to an AK, in any of their movie appearances ever again, right?
If not ... why not?
/s
That would be new because Chewis bandolier usually was claimed to be some sort of sash representing some position he held among Wookies.
Then again, there are other Star Wars sources that say otherwise: Obviously that’s where he carries the
Wookie condoms!
Yes, ASK Michele!
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