Real family entertainment is difficult to come by at times. As a parent, we check to make sure whatever we watch, read or listen to is tame enough for our children. Raw language, over dramatized violence, and inappropriate relationships seem to be the norm in our culture. Sometimes, it’s even snuck into children’s full length feature cartoons. As members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, we pay particular attention to the rating, language content, and violence of movies as we have been admonished by our church leaders.
1. No
picture shall be produced which will lower the moral standards of those who see
it.
2.
Correct standards of life, subject only to the requirements of drama and
entertainment, shall be presented.
3.
Law--divine, natural or human--shall not be ridiculed, nor shall sympathy be
created for its violation.
In an NBC "In Depth" news report by Mike Belcher on October 19, 1995, teenagers of different backgrounds and lifestyles were questioned about what they watched at the theater. To these adolescents, "violence was perceived as normal" and it was common to see "women in sexual situations".
Is this what the American public see in their everyday
life? I would say not. But through the movies being produced today,
we are reinforcing our own stereotypes.
We know that in our day-to-day life, most people never see the kind of
violence that is shown in the films we watch at the theater. Yet these violent, sex-ridden movies are popular
and are supposedly reflect the kind of life we have in this country.
In a speech delivered on May 5, 1995 to the University of
Toronto, Canada, Michael Medved said, "We hear the cries of Hollywood, who
say 'we are just reflecting reality, don't blame us'". But as Mr. Medved points out "if the
rate of murder from TV and movies were applied in reality, then in just 50
days, everyone in the United States would be killed."
A report from U.S. News and World Report, September 11,
1995 said "a psychologist, Leonard Eron of the University of Michigan's
Institute for Social Research, has tracked 650 New York children from 1960 to
the present, looking at viewing habits and behavior. Those who watched the most violent television
as youngsters grew up to engage in the most aggressive behavior as adults, from
spouse abuse to drunk driving."
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