tieuellegacy
Active member
To be fair, I did a piece for CinemATL on this movie already and was tried to ask about ethics without really asking and it seems to have come up with the audience here in ATL.
I was supposed to be at this screening but opted out yesterday as I can see it Saturday but I feel terrible as I included it on a rocommended film list and hope nobody that went upon my recommendation got hurt or even frazzled as that is not the experience one should expect at a film screening.
-Martin
This walks an interesting line. I read about this film a month or so ago and I wondered how it would be received.
We've seen this story before. It's a combination of "Blair Witch Project" and "Gangtapes". Gangtapes was also distro'd by Lionsgate around 2002. A camera is stolen and then you see the innerworkings of the group. That's the part that makes it so real at times. If the audio on this one was so good though, it makes me feel that the movie is semi-scripted. This is exactly what happens in "reality TV". They place you in situations and ask you to react. Think about it. If they were really filming reality television, the people in the background would always look into the cameras just like news segments or professionally televised games.
Other issues are that if all of these things were real then they have incriminated themselves. That defeats part of the purpose. Also when a call is made in "reality television" you typically hear both sides of the exchange. There's no real way to get all of that coverage on say a Housewives of Atlanta. They would have to send a camera crew with every person and wait for the phone calls. Then they have to be in place when the fights happen.
Filmmakers do have a responsibility. They should tell their story. Some people will like it and some people won't. I knew that this was going to be a gruesome story and I am in Texas. Why didn't the people in the audience understand that before they went in? Was there a parental advisory posted anywhere? Wouldn't it make sense to wait for the QA at the end to address the issues of the film? I don't agree with filmmakers confronting the viewers (if that happened) as they walk out but I do think that it's important for filmmakers to get feedback. I've watched a lot of drug use and a lot of gunplay in film. I just saw fake pics of Osama's murdered corpse. Those things are equally as gruesome. We aren't in an uproar about those things though. We've celebrated the death of the man without knowing if he's really dead or not.
Also, it's my opinion that it might've been necessary to have a kid play with the drugs. That is in my film as well. It's one of the only ways that I feel people who use the drugs will pay real attention. Otherwise, it seems like another movie with drugs in it.
I would like to see the film to see if it's really that realistic. Is it any worse than Scared Straight or Gangbanging in Little Rock (or whatever the title is)? Was there a message in the end that they all missed because of the fight?
Tieuel Legacy! aka The Devi's Devil's Advocate