Prime0882 said:
The taint of QAnon is not going away from that forum, for me at least, since I lurked there enough to know today's full throated rebuke of the QAnon posting was not occurring when F16 was a hotbed for it.
Prime0882 said:
The taint of QAnon is not going away from that forum, for me at least, since I lurked there enough to know today's full throated rebuke of the QAnon posting was not occurring when F16 was a hotbed for it.
Sapper Redux said:
Actual child sex trafficking is not a political issue. QAnon conspiracies about trafficking are, and conflating medical care for trans teens with "grooming," certainly is.
Quote:
The taint of QAnon
This is a very good point, I appreciate the well thought out viewpoint.Proposition Joe said:
I don't think many of us care about F16's chiming in with their insight/feelings about the film.
But F16 is a... bit of an echo chamber that meets those who offer a different voice with a lot of combative and "gotcha!" type posts. I don't think anyone can read that board and claim otherwise. It's Rivalries board except instead of A&M vs Texas it's heavy red leaning vs heavy blue leaning. And that's fine for that forum.
But when those posting styles end up on other boards, it tends to push away anyone looking for just normal Entertainment Board conversation.
In short, it's not a disdain for the poster, or the poster's viewpoints... It's a disdain for the posting style.
That is the point of this thread. This work was held up for 5 years after being in the can and once the rights were procured, people across the industry start railing against those involved in project and painting it as some sort of conspiratorial right wing propaganda. And the film has a plot and thesis that no normal person could argue against. The industry almost always celebrates the Indie films and smaller projects. The industry loves when people tell a story that needs to be told. The industry gushes when people have a "passion project".Quote:
I don't think many of us care about Hollywood chiming in with their insight/feelings about social topics.
But Hollywood is a... bit of an echo chamber that meets those who offer a different voice with a lot of combative and "gotcha!" type posts such as painting a film from an opposing voice as conspiratorial. I don't think anyone can watch their product and claim otherwise. It's Rivalries board except instead of A&M vs Texas it's heavy blue leaning elitists vs normal citizens.
But when their propoganda end up in every piece of entertainment, it tends to push away anyone looking for just normal EntertainmentBoard conversation.
In short, it's not a disdain for the people of hollywood,... It's a disdain for their heavy handed self righteous messaging.
So what? The Entertainment board is an echo chamber, too, complete with combative posts trying to bully others who hold different viewpoints.Proposition Joe said:
But F16 is a... bit of an echo chamber that meets those who offer a different voice with a lot of combative and "gotcha!" type posts. I don't think anyone can read that board and claim otherwise.
So you watched it? What did you like/not like about it? tiaCapybara said:
It's unfortunate that large portions of audiences no longer care about the broader aesthetics of any film. I'd probably just kms if I were middle-aged and getting into arguments online about human/child trafficking as it relates to some poorly-made movie like this one. Every nation's intelligence organizations either abet or ignore this stuff. Sucks, but sh/t movies like this have no shot at cracking that open.
Good point. I have seen some Star Trek fans incite violence and storm Comicon due to their belief Trek is better than Star Wars.EclipseAg said:So what? The Entertainment board is an echo chamber, too, complete with combative posts trying to bully others who hold different viewpoints.Proposition Joe said:
But F16 is a... bit of an echo chamber that meets those who offer a different voice with a lot of combative and "gotcha!" type posts. I don't think anyone can read that board and claim otherwise.
Some posters on Forum 13 act just like the posters on Politics they despise.
And the irony is, when opposing world viewpoints are brought up on F16...people don't ask for it to be removed or banned. They just argue it or make fun of it...and things snowball from there. But on here, there are people who want it policed and removed altogether.EclipseAg said:So what? The Entertainment board is an echo chamber, too, complete with combative posts trying to bully others who hold different viewpoints.Proposition Joe said:
But F16 is a... bit of an echo chamber that meets those who offer a different voice with a lot of combative and "gotcha!" type posts. I don't think anyone can read that board and claim otherwise.
Some posters on Forum 13 act just like the posters on Politics they despise.
Prime0882 said:Good point. I have seen some Star Trek fans incite violence and storm Comicon due to their belief Trek is better than Star Wars.EclipseAg said:So what? The Entertainment board is an echo chamber, too, complete with combative posts trying to bully others who hold different viewpoints.Proposition Joe said:
But F16 is a... bit of an echo chamber that meets those who offer a different voice with a lot of combative and "gotcha!" type posts. I don't think anyone can read that board and claim otherwise.
Some posters on Forum 13 act just like the posters on Politics they despise.
StandUpforAmerica said:
''Sound of Freedom' Beats 'Indiana Jones' in Incredible Box-Office Coup'
https://www.newsweek.com/sound-freedom-beats-indiana-jones-incredible-box-office-coup-1811206
Pretty good results for a movie with a 'lunatic' in it.
Proposition Joe said:
I guess this kind of begs the question then...
If it was questionably a "Hollywood" grand conspiracy to keep this type of movie from seeing the light of day and/or being successful...
...yet this movie has seen the light of day and looks to be successful...
Is Hollywood not all powerful and can't really "silence" any movie that has an actual audience?
... or did this movie just invigorate the "moral" majority?
... or did this movie simply use a marketing tactic to gain word of mouth traction in order to be more profitable...
What if I told you it was a little of all 3?
Sapper Redux said:StandUpforAmerica said:
''Sound of Freedom' Beats 'Indiana Jones' in Incredible Box-Office Coup'
https://www.newsweek.com/sound-freedom-beats-indiana-jones-incredible-box-office-coup-1811206
Pretty good results for a movie with a 'lunatic' in it.
Or it says something about the number of lunatics.
Goodness, what is wrong with some of you???Sapper Redux said:StandUpforAmerica said:
''Sound of Freedom' Beats 'Indiana Jones' in Incredible Box-Office Coup'
https://www.newsweek.com/sound-freedom-beats-indiana-jones-incredible-box-office-coup-1811206
Pretty good results for a movie with a 'lunatic' in it.
Or it says something about the number of lunatics.
Gigem314 said:And the irony is, when opposing world viewpoints are brought up on F16...people don't ask for it to be removed or banned. They just argue it or make fun of it...and things snowball from there. But on here, there are people who want it policed and removed altogether.EclipseAg said:So what? The Entertainment board is an echo chamber, too, complete with combative posts trying to bully others who hold different viewpoints.Proposition Joe said:
But F16 is a... bit of an echo chamber that meets those who offer a different voice with a lot of combative and "gotcha!" type posts. I don't think anyone can read that board and claim otherwise.
Some posters on Forum 13 act just like the posters on Politics they despise.
I try to choose my words carefully on this board, because there's actually a lot of interesting discussion I like to take part in because I'm passionate about movies and music. But there are times where this place feels super uptight and it's like walking on eggshells.
Tibbers said:Proposition Joe said:
I guess this kind of begs the question then...
If it was questionably a "Hollywood" grand conspiracy to keep this type of movie from seeing the light of day and/or being successful...
...yet this movie has seen the light of day and looks to be successful...
Is Hollywood not all powerful and can't really "silence" any movie that has an actual audience?
... or did this movie just invigorate the "moral" majority?
... or did this movie simply use a marketing tactic to gain word of mouth traction in order to be more profitable...
What if I told you it was a little of all 3?
I could definitely see how it's all three. Every movie requires promotion to be successful, the Streisand effect surely does exist as well. But I think the main pull of the film is that people do want to show in force and en masse the desire to shed light on important topics. It's kind of the reverse of Bud Light. People always vote with their wallet. When you put a target on a product, whether good or bad, it necessitates action.
The film was shot and made five years ago and was shelved. Then the articles came to disparage Tim Ballard. They had their effect, the film of his life story became toxic. It took a grassroots movement to get this movie distributed. It took confirmation of ticket sales to get this movie in multiple theaters nationwide. This is not a typical release as you all know. It also sheds light that there is clearly a market for good vs evil, real world plights about good people doing good things for those in need. Why then, if there is a market for this style of storytelling, aren't more movies like this made by those who have direct access to distribution? Why do they continue to parrot the same political narrative regardless if there's a marketable audience?
Why have the Oscars amended their standards to DEI level inclusion policies just to be anointed their golden trophy?
Do we even need the Oscars? What weight does that really have? Could there not be a counter to the Oscars that reflect good film, regardless of criteria met?
Just an odd hill to die on for Hollywood. Do we even really need them? Technology, land, opportunity, all can be had in greater abundance in Texas and the like. Hell the only reason filmmakers fled to cali was to get away from Edison and his men for using his camera. Disney was founded on retelling stories already told and required no rights. It's time for a renaissance.
Proposition Joe said:Tibbers said:Proposition Joe said:
I guess this kind of begs the question then...
If it was questionably a "Hollywood" grand conspiracy to keep this type of movie from seeing the light of day and/or being successful...
...yet this movie has seen the light of day and looks to be successful...
Is Hollywood not all powerful and can't really "silence" any movie that has an actual audience?
... or did this movie just invigorate the "moral" majority?
... or did this movie simply use a marketing tactic to gain word of mouth traction in order to be more profitable...
What if I told you it was a little of all 3?
I could definitely see how it's all three. Every movie requires promotion to be successful, the Streisand effect surely does exist as well. But I think the main pull of the film is that people do want to show in force and en masse the desire to shed light on important topics. It's kind of the reverse of Bud Light. People always vote with their wallet. When you put a target on a product, whether good or bad, it necessitates action.
The film was shot and made five years ago and was shelved. Then the articles came to disparage Tim Ballard. They had their effect, the film of his life story became toxic. It took a grassroots movement to get this movie distributed. It took confirmation of ticket sales to get this movie in multiple theaters nationwide. This is not a typical release as you all know. It also sheds light that there is clearly a market for good vs evil, real world plights about good people doing good things for those in need. Why then, if there is a market for this style of storytelling, aren't more movies like this made by those who have direct access to distribution? Why do they continue to parrot the same political narrative regardless if there's a marketable audience?
Why have the Oscars amended their standards to DEI level inclusion policies just to be anointed their golden trophy?
Do we even need the Oscars? What weight does that really have? Could there not be a counter to the Oscars that reflect good film, regardless of criteria met?
Just an odd hill to die on for Hollywood. Do we even really need them? Technology, land, opportunity, all can be had in greater abundance in Texas and the like. Hell the only reason filmmakers fled to cali was to get away from Edison and his men for using his camera. Disney was founded on retelling stories already told and required no rights. It's time for a renaissance.
I think you're looking for a grand conspiracy when there isn't one. How can Hollywood be all about the almighty dollar, but then according to you they are passing up the almighty dollar in order to silence a message?
Didn't The Passion of the Christ make a boatload of money?
Truth is these movies aren't being silenced, the majority of them just aren't of great quality. There's plenty of them out there, just like there's plenty of crap horror flicks that never see the big screen. If a true market for widespread release reveals itself for these films, then they will start getting more funding from the studios. However they also have to be careful to make sure the box office numbers reflect a true yearning for the content rather than a curated marketing push to certain demographics. Why? Because it's the difference between mainstream fool's gold and real gold.
They can recycle the same lackluster Indiana Jones or Marvel franchise and they have the box office history to know the demand floor. On a movie like this, they don't. If they prove themselves over time, they will.
And spare me the Oscar talk... I mean, most people outside of Hollywood don't actually take it that seriously, so if it annoys you that is on you... but go check out what film won Best Picture in 2016. A movie about a child sex abuse investigation. Mystic River (about a bunch of boys who were sexually abducted/abused taking out revenge) won a bunch of awards. High quality content on these topics has been made AND it's won awards. So no, despite what far right news outlets tell you, they aren't being "silenced".
Don't misunderstand -- Hollywood is filled with a bunch of creeps. Every time Jeepers Creepers 2 is on I wonder how in the hell they let this guy [Salva] anywhere near young actors and how every other scene is just an enormous red flag that the guy has issues.
But big tech is filled with a decent number of creeps too. Ditto politics. Hell, reference above -- ditto religion. It's not unique to Hollywood.
Tibbers said:
Nope, you've chosen your position and without even seeing the film chose your spot. No mea culpas here. Take the L and hit dusty trail. Parrot the Hollywood machine somewhere else if that's what you are doing.
Tibbers said:Proposition Joe said:Tibbers said:Proposition Joe said:
I guess this kind of begs the question then...
If it was questionably a "Hollywood" grand conspiracy to keep this type of movie from seeing the light of day and/or being successful...
...yet this movie has seen the light of day and looks to be successful...
Is Hollywood not all powerful and can't really "silence" any movie that has an actual audience?
... or did this movie just invigorate the "moral" majority?
... or did this movie simply use a marketing tactic to gain word of mouth traction in order to be more profitable...
What if I told you it was a little of all 3?
I could definitely see how it's all three. Every movie requires promotion to be successful, the Streisand effect surely does exist as well. But I think the main pull of the film is that people do want to show in force and en masse the desire to shed light on important topics. It's kind of the reverse of Bud Light. People always vote with their wallet. When you put a target on a product, whether good or bad, it necessitates action.
The film was shot and made five years ago and was shelved. Then the articles came to disparage Tim Ballard. They had their effect, the film of his life story became toxic. It took a grassroots movement to get this movie distributed. It took confirmation of ticket sales to get this movie in multiple theaters nationwide. This is not a typical release as you all know. It also sheds light that there is clearly a market for good vs evil, real world plights about good people doing good things for those in need. Why then, if there is a market for this style of storytelling, aren't more movies like this made by those who have direct access to distribution? Why do they continue to parrot the same political narrative regardless if there's a marketable audience?
Why have the Oscars amended their standards to DEI level inclusion policies just to be anointed their golden trophy?
Do we even need the Oscars? What weight does that really have? Could there not be a counter to the Oscars that reflect good film, regardless of criteria met?
Just an odd hill to die on for Hollywood. Do we even really need them? Technology, land, opportunity, all can be had in greater abundance in Texas and the like. Hell the only reason filmmakers fled to cali was to get away from Edison and his men for using his camera. Disney was founded on retelling stories already told and required no rights. It's time for a renaissance.
I think you're looking for a grand conspiracy when there isn't one. How can Hollywood be all about the almighty dollar, but then according to you they are passing up the almighty dollar in order to silence a message?
Didn't The Passion of the Christ make a boatload of money?
Truth is these movies aren't being silenced, the majority of them just aren't of great quality. There's plenty of them out there, just like there's plenty of crap horror flicks that never see the big screen. If a true market for widespread release reveals itself for these films, then they will start getting more funding from the studios. However they also have to be careful to make sure the box office numbers reflect a true yearning for the content rather than a curated marketing push to certain demographics. Why? Because it's the difference between mainstream fool's gold and real gold.
They can recycle the same lackluster Indiana Jones or Marvel franchise and they have the box office history to know the demand floor. On a movie like this, they don't. If they prove themselves over time, they will.
And spare me the Oscar talk... I mean, most people outside of Hollywood don't actually take it that seriously, so if it annoys you that is on you... but go check out what film won Best Picture in 2016. A movie about a child sex abuse investigation. Mystic River (about a bunch of boys who were sexually abducted/abused taking out revenge) won a bunch of awards. High quality content on these topics has been made AND it's won awards. So no, despite what far right news outlets tell you, they aren't being "silenced".
Don't misunderstand -- Hollywood is filled with a bunch of creeps. Every time Jeepers Creepers 2 is on I wonder how in the hell they let this guy [Salva] anywhere near young actors and how every other scene is just an enormous red flag that the guy has issues.
But big tech is filled with a decent number of creeps too. Ditto politics. Hell, reference above -- ditto religion. It's not unique to Hollywood.
I hear ya, but the Oscars and Hollywood are intrinsically linked. If it was a joke, no one of merit would even bother to show up. And that's precisely the point I'm trying to make. People are tired of the tent pole films yet they continue to be produced when better more heartfelt alternatives could be explored. The Oscars choosing to adopt these inclusive properties when foregoing the actual creative process is simply an example of Hollywood losing its way and when things loose their way and get loose, sometimes it's time to just move on.
Always make me laugh how serious some of y'all keyboard warriors take message boards.Tibbers said:
No, you've shown your true colors. Difficult to just say, "oh ok, but all the other movies this dude maybe promotes, well that's of good faith" no thanks. You chose your words carefully. Fall by them.
Tibbers said:
No, you've shown your true colors. Difficult to just say, "oh ok, but all the other movies this dude maybe promotes, well that's of good faith" no thanks. You chose your words carefully. Fall by them.
Eso si, Que es said:
I would genuinely enjoy reading your thoughts on this movie if you ever see it, let us know.
I can acknowledge that I have a list of entertainers I avoid based on their personal/public opinions and I can understand that you probably feel the same way about Jim C. I personally had no idea who he was outside of a few characters he portrayed, and Passion of the Christ was not one of them, I have not seen it.
There are also people in the industry that I don't like their ability or direction, and I don't watch their product because they don't entertain me. Entertainment is subjective like that. It gets more and more difficult to consume entertainment without viewing it through a lens in 2023 as everything is tinted by a divided populace. The images should be projected with a non tinted, neutral light to appeal across large sections of society, but unfortunately that seems impossible right now. If their is a tint to this film beyond the single statement of God's children are not for sale, I don't see it. If you watch the film and see a political or social slant to it, please share.
fig96 said:
It's also worth noting that we've had some really good discussions in here on a variety of social topics around film and entertainment. It's usually when people that have zero actual interest in the topic at hand feel the need to interject their random opinion, call everyone else a pedophile, etc., that things go off the rails.
I'm not saying anyone was right or wrong for doing so but I've seen plenty of conservative people on here refuse to see something simply because of a star's personal views. How is that any different?Tibbers said:
Yet you chose to downgrade a picture without even seeing it based on those who were attached to the project. Sorry man. No amount of back tracking and friend helping can get you out of this hole.