As “Game of Thrones” swept the Emmys to
become the most awarded narrative series in history, the TV world
remarked approvingly that its exceptional production values were being
given due recognition.
But critics say its success is
emblematic of an increasingly disturbing predilection in television for
intense violence, with directors swapping old-fashioned scares for the
kind of gut-churning gore once confined to R-rated movies.
Since its debut in 2010, the fantasy
epic — which has now hauled in 38 Emmys in total, including best drama
for two years running — has been the target of criticism for senseless
violence and, more controversially, its pervasive use of rape as a
dramatic device.
Over the years, the show has brutalized
women, killed children, depicted graphic sex and had its characters
hacked, stabbed, flayed, poisoned, decapitated, burned alive, eye-gouged
and eviscerated — all in glorious, close-up detail.
News magazine The Atlantic described the
show’s tendency to “ramp up the sex, violence, and — especially —
sexual violence” in George RR Martin’s source novels as its “defining
weakness.”
Leigh Whannell, who created and starred
in the “Saw” and “Insidious” horror franchises, says the creep of
violence into TV was the inevitable result of the small screen usurping
cinema as the go-to medium for quality entertainment.
“As the broadcasters open up, there’s
places like Netflix, Hulu and all these different streaming services and
more places to show material, the hunger for material is increasing,”
he told AFP.
“I think the rules of what you can and
can’t show are widening. A place like Netflix can essentially show
whatever they want. They don’t have to stick to the rules of an ABC or a
CBS.”
– Blood and guts –
The blood and guts clearly isn’t a turn
off for fans of “Game of Thrones,” which has grown its audience in the
US — where it is shown on premium cable network HBO — to more than 25
million, and is breaking records across the world.
Zombie thriller “The Walking Dead,” meanwhile, claims the highest total viewership of any series in cable television history.
A host of other violent cable and
satellite shows, from FX’s “The Strain” and Showtime’s “Penny Dreadful”
to Cinemax’s “The Knick” have all been ratings successes — despite the
blood and guts.
And network shows like NBC’s “Hannibal” demonstrate that violence isn’t confined to cable.
A 2013 study by the Parents Television
Council stated that “some of the most violent TV-14-rated shows on
broadcast TV have similar levels and types of violence as TV-MA-rated
(Mature Audience) cable TV shows.”
“I’ve always been of the view that if
you don’t like it, don’t watch. If someone doesn’t like ‘Game of
Thrones,’ they can switch off,” Whannell told AFP.
There is some evidence of a correlation
between small screen and real-life violence, although proof of a causal
link has always been patchy.
Psychologists George Comstock and
Haejung Paik analyzed more than 200 studies published between 1957 and
1990, concluding that fictional violence might have a short-term effect
on the mindset of susceptible viewers.
Six American medical organizations
reviewed the research in 2000 and issued a joint statement to Congress
concluding that “viewing entertainment violence can lead to increases in
aggressive attitudes, values, and behavior, particularly in children.”
– ‘Screwed up’ –
Mike Flanagan, the director of
Universal’s upcoming horror film “Ouija: Origin of Evil,” says intense
violence, gore, torture and rape have been much more accepted on
primetime TV since the turn of the century.
“Our tolerance has been challenged and
there’s only one direction for those things to go. The more we see, and
the more content that is put out there in the marketplace, the more
gradually desensitized we become,” he told AFP.
“In order to get people’s attention, there’s this gravity toward pushing the envelope even further.”
But this isn’t necessarily a bad thing,
he argues, describing television as a provider of a “safe space” in
which people are able to reflect on the darker side of human nature.
“One of the positives is that at least
we get to explore that side of ourselves in a relatively safe
environment and in an environment where we can turn off the TV or where
the lights come on after the movie is over,” Flanagan said.
Actress and producer Naomi Grossman, who
starred in two seasons of FX’s “American Horror Story,” meanwhile says
she wants to see “more sex and less violence” on TV.
“I just think Americans have it all screwed up, to be honest,” she told AFP.
“It’s so strange to me that you can’t show a nipple, can’t show breastfeeding, yet you can see someone’s neck get slashed.”
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