Towelhead Not Racist Just Borderline Pedophile
- By Jason Latorre
- Published 08/22/2008
Jason Latorre
I'm Jason and yea I'm that 20 something year old who goes to film school, but don't worry I don't think I know everything about film. I'm attending Emerson College in Boston, where I'm pursuing my BA in Film Production with a focus in Directing. Insert cliche phrase about passion here... Film is my life. I'm in love with both films and movies(big difference). Sometimes we make sweet love and other times I'm just yelling then we make angry love. If you backed me in a corner and asked my favorite movie I would have
to say Moulin Rouge by Baz Luhrman, but only if we are excluding the
original Star Wars Trilogy. Sorry, but first movie I remember seeing was
Return of the Jedi. I will try and hit from different angles on a variety of subjects plus bring great reviews of current and future releases. Stick with me kids cause I've got the good candy and I won't overcharge you for it.
How this movie was able to get past the ratings board and not get NC-17 is beyond me. I get what they were trying to say in the movie, this stuff happens and we have to face it, but is it necessary to be so graphic about it. Do I need to see every moment of a girl losing her virginity to a pedophile fingering her to know what is happening? Or is it necessary to be there for every moment of her having sex with her underage boyfriend to know that they have sex? I wonder if the director of this film realizes that the less you show typically the deeper the impact because audiences imagination is usually worse then anything that can be shown. In fact the big sex scene towards the end has the greatest impact because of the fact that they cut away. Well the question still lingers. Is this a good movie?
The subject matter is definitely interesting. The characters are also interesting, especially Aaron Eckhart's pedophile role and the father played by Peter Macdissi. Unfortunately the meat of the story doesn't really occur until more then halfway in and by then I was definitely turned off to the movie. In the end the thirteen year old doesn't have the right to make the decision she makes and it came off more as promoting that choice then making sure the responsible decision is made. I was suprised more tact wasn't used considering the novelist also wrote American Beauty and the Director/Screenwriter also wrote the script for American Beauty. I definitely leave this one in the hands of the audience since it comes down to how much is someone willing to accept for the sake of telling a story. If this is too preachy, oh well, what can I say? Sometimes I judge.




