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“It’s quite simple: I hate these movies. I won’t see these movies. Never saw Saw or its sequels, never will. I’m not impressed with the ‘quality’ of the gore or the ‘wit’ of the filmmaking. I’m not enjoyably scared; I’m horrified, and not in the way horror fans get off, groaning and screaming with pack-mentality excitement. Instead, my horror is one of disturbance and anger: Who makes this vile crap? What is remotely defensible about a movie like Captivity, in which a woman is abducted and tortured for the sake of ticket sales? Nothing, that’s what. While moviegoers can vote with their wallets, I vote with my computer keyboard. Or rather, the silence of the keys, as I stay away from stuff I have no stomach for seeing, even on the job.”
3 comments:
Joe, excellent find!! I always liked Lisa's reviews, and now I know why - she has a BRAIN!!
I hate these damn movies, too. The modern horror movie is dead, dead, dead.
www.therecshow.com
Good for Schwarzbaum. I don't necessarily share her opinion of the genre, but it's obviously not her cup of tea and if she doesn't understand it, I don't need to read her opinion of it.
What about you, Joe? Do you get to pick and choose the movies you review or are you obligated by editors?
As I have written elsewhere: At this point in my career, I see only those movies I want to watch, and those I’m paid to review. Some films (Knocked Up, Reign Over Me, The Motel, Small Engine Repair and The Prisoner: Or, How I Planned to Kill Tony Blair, to cite just a few recent examples) fall into both categories. Others don’t. I was paid to review Captivity and Black Christmas, so I did. No one offered to pay me to see Saw or Hostel (or any of any of their sequels), so I didn’t.
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