April 14, 2004

Shock, horror: sex doesn't sell

It is the news that a particular kind of movie mogul has been dreading: sex no longer sells. Films containing explicit sex or nudity are earning less on average than more wholesome movies.

The article goes on to point out a number of aspects to the statistics that indicate the study has significant control flaws. Still, it's an interesting -- and encouraging -- theory.

Americans were more likely to enjoy films with a religious or moral content because Christian belief remained much more entrenched in the US than in countries such as Australia and Britain.

While the US is generally less accepting of non-Christian religions, I'm not sure that's the same thing as saying that Christian belief is more entrenched, particularly given the drop-off in church attendance in the more traditional denominations. Certainly, the South and the various Baptist branches are enthusiastic bible-thumpers, but representative of the country as a whole? I'm unconvinced.

"We've certainly seen that with the box office success of The Passion of the Christ in America, which is unlikely to be repeated [in Britain]," [film critic and columnist Will Self] said. "We are a secular country, thank God."

Now THAT is a truly interesting statement, coming from a citizen of Britain -- where the Queen is still the head of the state-sanctioned church. I'd love to discuss it with the columnist in more detail...

The rise in popularity of films that are moral in tone looks set to continue after the success of The Passion. Even though the dialogue is in Latin and Aramaic, it has grossed almost $US400 million since its release last month.

Which is mind-boggling, given the American public's normal reaction to non-English language films. Releasing a film with subtitles is normally the kiss of death, resulting in instant relegation solely to art house screens.

Broadcaster and critic Sheridan Morley believes audiences have been tiring of action thrillers. "I am surprised by these findings because they go against all the wisdom of recent Hollywood," he said. "It just shows, once again, how out of touch Hollywood is with what the audience wants.

"Films have been totally mechandised in recent years and are no longer about people. Now we've got so high-tech that we've lost the sense of real human relationships. Cinema needs to get back to people."

Amen, brother.

Zanzibar is very far...

Zanzibar's parliament late Tuesday unanimously passed a bill outlawing homosexuality, with prison terms of up to 25 years for gay relationships. [...] If the bill becomes law, a person found guilty of sodomizing a minor will receive an automatic life sentence. The penalty for a homosexual relationship between men will be a 25-year sentence, and the punishment for a lesbian relationship will be a seven-year sentence.

Completely aside from the basic premise of the law, which is so patently asinine as to defy comment, this schedule of punishments makes no sense. While I support penalties of some sort for inappropriate contact (homo- OR heterosexual) with a minor, I don't get the gender disparity in the cases between consenting adults. Is it simply that, culturally, women in Zanzibar (and their actions) are of little or no consequence in comparison to men? Or is there something even more insidious at work?