How to recognize which violence in Movies and Books are educational and which are plain violent

Does society tolerant violence which is why violence is so prevalent? There is countless violence movies made available to the public. Some notable violent movies are Eden Lake, Saw, the Good Son, and a book: Crime and Punishment.

A book which has an interesting perspective on violence is Crime and Punishment by Dostoevsky. The story is of an intellectual man, Raskolnikov, who is very poor and is tempted to rob money from the landlord. He succumbs to his temptation and commits murder. No one finds out about the murder but he psychologically suffers for his violence and crime or is mentally punished. On the other hand, another character, Sonya, is also very poor and in order to feed her family she submits herself to prostitution. She engages in a lowly job but does not really commit any crime. In this story, violence is a crime and is shown to be wrong no matter what the circumstances. Sonya’s example proves to be an alternative to crime. She serves as a model in contrast with the man to show that there is no excuse for violence. Thus, this is an educational book about violence.

On the other hand, the movie Eden Lake is about a couple who goes into the woods to enjoy themselves but is attacked by a local group of violent teenagers. They play a game of cat and mouse where the woman is hunted down for kill, after her boyfriend is tortured and murdered. After she desperately escapes the woods and the grasp of the teenagers, she collapses on the property of some local adults. These adults turn out to be the friends and family of the violent teenagers.  While trying to escape she killed one kid and one teenager from the group. The parents do not care what happened and they blame it all on her because she is an adult and they are “kids”. Many die and nothing gets solved. The violent movie has no meaning.  A couple is killed for no good reason. Plainly they die because they were in the wrong place.  The parents are violent and thus, the kids are violent. What message does this violent movie bring? Is it to not travel to unfamiliar places or to stay out of the woods?  This leads to the question of should parents punish their child when he does wrong? If these kids learned violence from the parents then are who is to blame? Are there enough educational movies to show that violence is bad and enough clinics to help kids learn the correct way?

There is an educational movie that depicts the right way parents should deal with children who are violent. In the movie, The Good Son, the son is jealous of his younger sister and the new boy who comes to live with them. First he kills his baby brother, then his baby sister and then tries to get rid of the new boy who knows of the evil son’s evil nature. Mark or the psychopath son also tries to kill his mother who is starting to doubt her son. The new boy tells the evil boy’s mother and she at first does not believe it. Clues led her to suspect what the new boy says is true. In the end when face with a hard decision in which she can only save one child either her own son or the nephew, she chooses the nephew. Although the movie has a violent aspect to it, the mother chooses the correct way which is to save the one that is not violent or deserves to a chance to live even though it means letting go of her son.

Yet, while there are educational movies of violence like “the Good Son”, there are far more movies depicting plain violence such as the Saw Series. The violent “Saw” movie is very popular that it is already a trilogy but it does not seem to end there. The end of the movie hinges on the release of fourth part. The series does not carry deep meaning or depict justice showing the bad guys getting caught by the good guys. Instead its main imagery is plain violent, gruesome, and cruel. The movie shows many violent images of people getting tortured by traps and kills each other to remain alive. They have to hurt themselves to survive or hurt others. What is the purpose of violent movies like this? Why does society tolerate these movies and allow it to be produced again to become into a popular series?

Another movie which takes a psychological angle to violence is “The Uninvited”. A girl, Anna, kills her father’s girlfriend blaming her father’s girlfriend for the death of her mother and sister. The movie is shown in a way in which you do not find out that she is the killer until the end and that all along she knew what she was doing. Yes, the her father cheated with the nurse while her mother is sick in bed and after her mother dies, this same nurse becomes the girlfriend and almost her stepmother. However, Anna is only placed in the mental institution and ultimately achieved her goals with no consequences.  What message would this send to other children? Should not a movie like this which depicts young children being violent show a cry for society to look into the matter of the prevalence of violence in society and that there is too much tolerance of violence?

Violent movies without an educational message only beget more violence.  People will learn from these meaningless violent movies thinking that it is fine to be violent.  There are more and more movies depicting children as violent.  The movies:  “Saw,”  “The Uninvited,” and “Eden Lake,” shows that there is a need for institutions to address the issue of violence and show that violence is wrong and will be punished. There should be more help for those who are suffering in violent families so that they will not follow in the same footsteps.

There is so much to do to try to fight violence but the effort will be worth it. The reason why violence is so prevalent and violent movies are so popular is because society tolerates violence. There is a huge difference between horror movies and violent movies. The distinction between them should be made clearer. Whereas horror movies aim at depicting fantasy scenarios and have some meaning to it, violent movies target on being gruesome and show imageries that should not be shown. There is no lesson to be learned and justice does not prevail. Mainly, the violent imageries and acts to depict for the enjoyment and violence should not be encouraged this way.

Society successfully tolerates and promotes violence so it should also be able to successfully do the opposite and promote the intolerance of violence so that violence will stop being prevalent. Recognizing the problem is the first step. Society needs to try and resolve the issue of violence. Only then is there hope violence will decrease and we will live in a safer environment and all our educational history will be used for better means than to create violent movies that show people harming others for no good reason.

Sources:

Crime and Punishment

The Good Son (film) The Uninvited

Written by blueage168

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The Most Violent Video Games

10. Carmageddon

Carmageddon is the first of a series of graphically violent vehicular combat video games produced by Stainless Games, published by Interplay and SCi. It was inspired by the 1975 cult classic movie Death Race 2000. The game that became Carmageddon started out as “3D Destruction Derby”, a banger-racing (stock-car) sim prototyped by Stainless.

This was signed by SCi in 1995, but the banger-racing angle was soon dropped and for a while the game was to use the Mad Max license. This fell through, and was replaced by the Death Race 2000 license, as a sequel to the original film was at that time planned (it eventually emerged as a comic book).

This introduced the running-over of pedestrians into the game.  When this license also fell through, SCi and Stainless took the decision to proceed with the game anyway, without a license. The name “Carmageddon” was coined, and development proceeded with the designers allowed unusually free rein with regard to the content of the game. -Wikipedia.org

9. Soldier of Fortune: Payback

Soldier of Fortune: Payback is the third installment of the Soldier of Fortune game series. Unlike the previous two Soldier of Fortune games, which were developed by Raven Software utilizing the Quake 2  and Quake 3 engines, Payback was developed by Cauldron HQ, developed with Cauldron’s in-house CloakNT engine, used in their previous First Person Shooter game, Chaser. This game is the first game of the series released for the Xbox 360  and PlayStation 3. The game was released on 14 November 2007. -Wikipedia.org

8. God of War III

God of War III is an action-adventure video game for PlayStation 3, developed by Sony Santa Monica, published by Sony Computer Entertainment and released worldwide in March 2010 and is the fifth installment to the series. Loosely based on Greek mythology and focused on protagonist  Kratos, the game forms part of a saga – the God of War series – with revenge as a central theme.  

In this final chapter in the current storyline, Kratos and his initial allies the Titans storm Mount Olympus in an attempt to kill Zeus and the Olympian Gods, leading to a series of confrontations across the Underworld and Olympus and the reintroduction of Pandora’s Box. -Wikipedia.org

7. Gears of War 2

Gears of War 2 is a third-person shooter video game developed by Epic Games with lead design by Cliff Bleszinski, and published by Microsoft Game Studios for the Xbox 360. It is the second installment of the Gears of War series. The game was officially released in North America, the United Kingdom, and Australia  on November 12, 2008. The game expands technically on the previous game by using a heavily -modified Unreal Engine 3 engine. The development team also brought in comic book writer Joshua Ortega to help write the plot for the game.

In Gears of War 2, the human Coalition of Ordered Governments (COG) forces continue their fight against the Locust horde, who are attempting to sink all of the cities on the planet Sera by using a big riftworm to eat the ground beneath them. Sergeant Marcus Fenix leads Delta Squad into the depths of the planet to try to stop the worm from eating but instead they discover the true intent of the Locust actions. The player controls Fenix in the main mission campaign, with the ability to play cooperatively with a second player controlling Fenix’s best friend and fellow Squad member Dominic “Dom” Santiago.

The game includes several existing and new multiplayer modes including five-on-five battles between human and Locust forces, and a “Horde” mode that challenges up to five players against waves of Locust forces with ever-increasing strength. New weapons and gameplay mechanics such as “hockey fights” and the ability to use downed foes as “meatshields” were added to the game. -Wikipedia.org

6. Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe

Mortal Kombat vs. DC Universe (also known as MK vs. DC) is a crossover fighting game from Midway Games and Warner Bros. Games. The eighth game in the Mortal Kombat series, MK vs. DC was released on November 16, 2008. The game contains characters from both the Mortal Kombat franchise and the DC Universe. The game’s story was written by comic writers Jimmy Palmiotti and Justin Gray. This was the last title to be developed and published by Midway Games, as it filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy and sold the rights to Mortal Kombat to Warner Bros. This is also the first console MK game to have an unrestricted rating by the ESRB.  

The game was developed using Epic Games’ Unreal Engine 3 and is available for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 platforms. It is the first Mortal Kombat title developed solely for a seventh generation console. The majority of its ratings range from 7.5/10 to 8.5/10. Most reviewers agreed that the game was entertaining and made good use of its DCU license; however, a lack of unlockable features as opposed to past installments and toned down finishers garnered some criticism. -Wikipedia.org

5. Thrill Kill

Thrill Kill is a cancelled 1998 fighting  video game for the Sony PlayStation, which even today is still widely available despite being officially unpublished. Thrill Kill was considered a technical feat for the PlayStation for allowing four players to fight simultaneously in the same room, although this technical feat was overshadowed by the brutality and controversy surrounding the game.

Set in an urban version of Hell, the characters were all damned souls fighting for another chance in the mortal world, watched over by Marukka the Goddess of Secrets, who has organized the infernal tournament and promised the winner reincarnation on Earth. Other content included revealing BDSM and fetishistic costumes, characters with amputated limbs and other handicaps  and violent and sexual moves with names such as “Bitch Slap”, “Swallow This”, and “Head Muncher”.

Eight damned souls have died and descended into Hell. This modern-day Hell is based on the real world of today’s deviants. The characters are the physical manifestations of their mental illnesses or the evil hidden within their mortal selves. Marukka, the Goddess of Secrets, is bored of her usual routine and decides that it would be entertaining to pit all of the characters against one another in a fighting tournament with the prize being reincarnation. Each character is battling for nothing more than self-preservation and the hope of being reborn. -Wikipedia.org

4. MadWorld

MadWorld  is a video game developed by Platinum Games and published by Sega. It was released for the Wii  on March 10, 2009 in North America, on March 20 in Europe, March 26 in Australia, and February 10 in Japan. It was re-released in Australia on March 11, 2010 in Sega Australia’s  ”Welcome To Violence” boxset, which also includes House of the Dead: Overkill and The Conduit.

MadWorld is divided into several levels representing different parts of Jefferson Island that have been converted into sets for the game show DeathWatch. The player progresses through these levels in a linear fashion during the first playthrough, but can revisit any completed level to attempt to score more points or take on a harder challenge. -Wikipedia.org

3. Manhunt

Manhunt is a stealth game developed by Rockstar Games, it was released November 18, 2003 for the PlayStation 2 video game console, and April 20, 2004 for Xbox and Windows. Although it was generally well-received by critics, Manhunt created a controversy due to the graphic violence the player is encouraged to engage in.

This resulted in the game being banned in several countries and implicated by media in a murder, although this implication was later rejected by the police. In October 2007, its sequel, Manhunt 2 was released and spawned a mass controversy as well . As of March 26, 2008, the Manhunt franchise has sold 1.7 million copies according to Take-Two Interactive. -Wikipedia.org

2. Grand Theft Auto: Episodes From Liberty City

Grand Theft Auto: Episodes From Liberty City is a standalone compilation of the downloadable content (DLC) episodes for the 2008 video game Grand Theft Auto IV, containing both The Lost and Damned  and The Ballad of Gay Tony  on one disc. It was released alongside the DLC release of The Ballad of Gay Tony  on 29 October 2009 for the Xbox 360 and released on 13 April 2010 for Microsoft Windows and PlayStation 3.

Unlike the standalone versions of the episodes, the compilation does not require a copy of Grand Theft Auto IV to play, nor is an Xbox Live or PlayStation Network account necessary (except for multiplayer). The content is also played straight from the disc, and does not need to be downloaded to a hard drive to play, like various other disc-based expansions for other Xbox 360 games that have been released in the past. -Wikipedia.org

1. Postal 2

Postal 2 (styled as Postal²) is a first-person shooter video game by Running with Scissors, and it is the sequel to the 1997 game Postal. Both are intentionally highly controversial due to high levels of violence and stereotyping. Unlike its predecessor, Postal 2 is played completely in first-person based on the Unreal Graphics Engine. Due to its graphic nature the game has been banned in Australia and several other places.

The developers of the game countered criticism of the violence by claiming that the amount of violence is up to the players—they may go about their tasks without causing trouble, or they can create mayhem. Critics state that the game clearly urges people playing the game to indulge in homicidal behavior, given that Dude is often attacked by ludicrous hate groups who despise everything from books to video games.

Additionally, there are long queues when Dude visits the bank, the library, Church, and elsewhere. The people of Paradise are exceptionally rude and spit insults at Dude if he bumps into them, and furthermore weapons ranging from machine guns to rocket launchers are left lying around for him to collect. -Wikipedia.org

Written by Spill Guy

A look at the production process for Future Motion Control gaming. Special thanks to Insomniac Games for animating the Chimera monsters from Resistance with us!
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