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Monday, January 28, 2008
Burt Prelutsky :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Tarnished Silver Screen
by Burt Prelutsky
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Another problem I had with the movie is that it’s extremely dark. I don’t mean its subject matter, I mean its lack of illumination. It’s one thing when the action, such as it is, takes place below ground level, but even after the villain is very rich and living in a mansion, it appears that he can’t afford anything but 20 watt bulbs.

Frankly, I wasn’t expecting much from “Sweeney Todd,” not being a fan of director Tim Burton or star Johnny Depp. What I did expect -- especially in a musical -- is that I’d be able to understand the dialogue and the lyrics. The truth is, after wasting 20 minutes trying to figure out what the heck Depp and Helena Bonham Carter were saying and singing, I simply threw in the towel. My wife, who stuck it through to the end, reports that every five minutes or so somebody got his throat cut.

For what it’s worth, two friends of mine who have been active in motion pictures, claimed the reason I couldn’t figure out what was being said was because the sound mixing was so bad. That doesn’t surprise me. Tim Burton is so concerned about the way his movies look that he pays scant attention to anything else. However, I think that this time around he had a hand in the hair styling, as both Mr. Depp and Ms. Carter wore theirs the same odd way that Mr. Burton wears his.

That brings us to “The Kite Runner,” which, unlike most of the others, had something to say about actual human beings. The only drawback was that it had a tedious second act and, so, it seemed to take a terribly long time saying it.

Some years ago, my wife, who goes to many more movies than I do, observed that scenes taking place in public restrooms had become commonplace. That struck me as highly unlikely, but I soon discovered that she was right. At one point, in fact, I saw four or five movies in a row and each one of them had a conversation or a fist fight taking place in a men’s room. I don’t know in what parallel universe these movie makers dwell, but not only have I never seen a fist fight in a bathroom, but I’ve rarely heard two words spoken in such places.

For my part, what I’ve been noticing is that a fair number of movies have adopted the rape of males as a plot device. Whereas I don’t recall its ever being employed during the first 25 years or so that I was seeing movies, I have now come across it in “Deliverance,” “Prince of Tides,” “The Shawshank Redemption,” “Mystic River” and now “The Kite Runner.” That doesn’t include “Brokeback Mountain,” where sodomy was the order of the day, but at least it was consensual.

To tell you the truth, I find myself longing for the good old days when every movie didn’t last close to three hours and a guy could be humiliated and still keep his pants on.

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About The Author
W. Burt Prelutsky is an accomplished, well-rounded writer and author of "The Secret of Their Success: Interviews with Legends and Luminaries."
 
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rent some good Italian films
Get away from Hollywood movies that are full of violence, have no substance and little story-telling - rent an Italian movie. Ok, so they have sub-titles but you get used to them after a few minutes. Best of my picks are:
Malena
Cinema Paradiso
Ciao Professore
Il Postino
Vita 'e bella (Life is beautiful)
Meditteraneo

Although my all time favorite film is Irish:
Waking Ned Devine

also a good recent English film: Kinky Boots (same folks who did Calendar Girls)

Best The 2nd Time Around!
Dear Mr. Prelutsky:

The truth cannot be too oft repeated! I scrolled down looking to find my old comment!! Oh, well.

What we DO need is more insightful commentary on Hollywood. Hollywood, after all, is the "heart & soul" (God help us!) of the popular culture. From it springs much of the inspiration for the pollution of our child's "hearts & souls". Precious little comes forth from elsewhere, despite the huge cavalcade of Hollywood-oriented blather. They all seem to revel in the mind-numbing misfocus on actors and movies coming and going. Rarely to you find any with the courage and initiative (and personal experience) to point out what it all means to us in the Heartland.

And it means a lot. What the Denizens say and do is spoken of to high-heaven and often lauded... no matter how low they or their works sink. Their films are talked of as "art"... no matter how perverse their content, message or (importantly!) the means of their making with increasing numbers of child actors. Their personal lives are presented with an aura of glamor or sob-sister tragedy... no matter how their decadence, irresponsibility or exploitiveness toward themselves and/or their families have so contributed. Yet, all this is presented as iconic to the American way of life.

Thank you for your efforts to help us understand the cinema from an all-points perspective. If Hollywood cannot be held forth any longer for the good it was once capable of (and so rarely is now), at least there are a few sources that can speak with authority on why we should be concerned and what we can tell our kids they should not see and not emulate. We need more good examples for them, certainly. Identifying the bad is helpful, too.

Best wishes
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