Posted on 05/12/2014 9:19:56 AM PDT by rickmichaels
It seemed like Game of Thrones had gotten to the point where nothing it did could shock anyone. Then came a scene in the April 20 episode Breaker of Chains, where Jaime Lannister (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) forced himself on his incestuous lover, Cersei (Lena Headey), while she urged him to stop. For turning a consensual scene from George R.R. Martins original books into an apparent rape scene, the producers received the most negative criticism of any episode in the shows history; the popular online critic Film Crit Hulk spoke for many people when he wrote Hulk smash the totally mishandled rape in the recent Game of Thrones episode. But the reaction might not have been so strong if this scene hadnt come on the heels of a period when rape has been perhaps more prevalent as a story point on TV than its ever been.
The current TV season has been especially heavy on this type of story ever since Mellie, the U.S. first lady on Scandal, turned out to have been raped by her own father-in-law. On House of Cards, the Lady Macbeth-like Claire revealed that a high-ranking military officer is the man who raped her in college. And in period dramas like Game of Thrones, rape scenes have become shorthand for the power imbalance between men and women: It happened to the anti-heroine of the 80s drama The Americans, to Anna the maid on Downton Abbey, and to Joan on Mad Men.
Many people took the popularity of this storytelling device as another sign that things arent good for women on TV. Karen Valby of Entertainment Weekly suggested there might be stories to tell about a female character that dont involve pinning her under some mans heaving chest.
But not all the reaction has been negative. Some commentators have argued that by making rape a big part of important characters histories, TV is finally dealing with the impact rape can have on its survivorsunlike older shows, where victims appeared for only a few minutes and then were forgotten. Eliana Dockterman of Time magazine wrote that Scandal and The Americans reflect societys new-found willingness to look at unreported rapes, to deal with the fact that for so long rape was something swept under the rug.
Alyssa Rosenberg of the Washington Post also drew attention to the difference between many current shows and the old exploitative rape plots on TV: in these shows, no one gets rescued; no one gets a day in court. Sometimes the rapists are punished, but usually through extra-legal means: the male lead of The Americans murders his wifes rapist, and Downton Abbey hinted that the same thing might have happened to Annas rapist. The writers are open, and critical, about the fact that the law often cant help rape victims: Amanda Marcotte of Slate praised House of Cards for showing that perhaps the forces of sexism are just too overwhelming for meaningful change in sexual assault law.
Yet even these shows can turn rape into a plot device. Some have used it as a humanizing factor for characters who otherwise seem unpleasant. The Washington Posts Bethonie Butler called the rape storyline on Scandal part of an attempt to make Mellie more likable. And The Americans co-creator Joe Weisberg said that Elizabeths rape was intended as a big part of what separated her from her husband, providing an easy explanation for why shes so repressed. For every show that tries to be sensitive about the impact of sexual assault, theres one like Downton Abbey, where the rape scene came off as old-fashioned melodramatic shock; Sadie Gennis of TV Guide called it rape as cheap and consumable entertainment.
Despite the efforts of some TV makers to show they take rape seriously, the Game of Thrones controversy may show that they dont always think through the implications of what theyre showing. Alex Graves, director of the notorious Game of Thrones episode, told Alan Sepinwall that people misread the scene, saying that it becomes consensual by the end, because anything for them ultimately results in a turn-on. TV shows may not be willing to use rape for titillation anymorebut theyre willing to use something that looks like it.
Robert Rogers is a bad guy but a spectacular character and very interesting historical figure.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NQVLP9Pu9pk
“I’ll make you something even lower than a sodomite or even a snake’s belly.”
Good show
Why do most of the video games involve violence?
That's sick............yes they will, and it will work.
Can't say that I disagree.
On the other hand, the presumption of innocence must be maintained. There have been many falso accusations of rape, and many men rotting in prison because a woman lied.
Therefore, I believe a false accusation should be severely punished, if proven. Not just for rape but for any crime.
100% agreement in that. Knowing that you could send someone to death because of your false words might make a few women realize the severity of a false accusation as well. And if there is a false accusation of rape, it should carry the same penalty as the rape itself.
No doubt true. My comment was meant somewhat in jest, to point out that firearms are indeed the great equalizer, making a 120 woman very nearly, if not exactly, equal to a 250 pound man in a fight.
My personal favorite in the movies is the woman archer specialist who outshoots men. Using a true warbow is one of the specialties of combat where men have the greatest advantage over women. The physical strength required is almost entirely upper body strength.
A medieval male English archer could probably pull a bow at least 3x the draw weight any woman of the time (or today) could pull, meaning he would have something around twice the range, assuming roughly equal levels of skill.
Recent evidence is that some English longbowmen pulled bows up to 180 pounds. Developing the strength and skill to do so took literally decades of training and created significant deformities in the archers’ skeletons. In mass graves of the time, they can pick the archers out by those deformities.
Unfortunately you are right. Rape is far more common than most people believe.
I’ve not watched much of GOT.
But the show has repeated mass slaughter of innocents and children, lots of torture, and nobody gets upset till a single character is raped?
A few months ago Boko Haram murdered 50 boys, many of them burned alive. Hardly made a blip on the news.
The same group kidnaps (and presumably rapes) 250 girls recently, and the world reacts with outrage. Entirely appropriately, to be sure.
Go to wikipedia for any recent conflict, and there will usually be considerably more space dedicated to discussion of the rape of women than to the mass murder of their men.
I’m as opposed to rape as it is possible to be, but when did murder of males become a minor issue relative to rape of women?
I always thought that was hilarious too.
Also Star Wars. People standing 20 feet apart and blazing away with blasters and nobody gets hurt. Always thought a tommy gun would have been considerably more effective.
Saw one of the Harry Potter movies with my daughter. Two groups were blazing away at each other with their wands inside an ice cream parlor or something. I wondered aloud to her about whether it might have been a better idea for somebody to bring along a Garand. She was not amused.
26. Present homosexuality, degeneracy and promiscuity as "normal, natural, healthy."
Because it’s white men.
Yes, I always wondered about the A-team. They were supposed to be the best of the best of the best, but couldn’t hit the broadside of a barn.
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