“Kate, cover your eyes!”
As a child, these were always the words that accompanied the explicit scenes during family movie nights. Due to the fact that I was either A) disturbed by the violent scenes unfolding on the TV screen,
or B) made extremely uncomfortable by seeing two people get more intimate than one is used to seeing on a daily basis, I always followed suit and sealed my sweaty palms over my young eyes. I don’t know about you, but I can recall far too many times of having to “cover my eyes” while watching movies with my family. Perhaps my family was letting me watch too explicit of movies at too early of an age thus necessitating the shielding of my eyes, but I think it’s something different…
Considering moving pictures have become some of the most prevalent and profitable forms of entertainment over the past century, it is no surprise that families gather around the television to spend some quality time together. I know that my family always had new, Blockbuster movies for our Friday night entertainment. Though there are some movies specifically created for children, and others rated for people 18+, there are always those in-between films that ride the line of “appropriateness” as something that is permissible to be showing an innocent mind. There are countless films that convey a healthy, powerful message that many parents would want to expose their family to. At the same time, these films with the powerful message have the occasional curse word, sex scene, or excessive violence that most parents feel uncomfortable exposing their innocent children to. Parents are now faced with a dilemma that is becoming increasingly hard to solve. Not only are movies becoming more explicit in the content that is being shown, but television shows on “family-friendly” networks are becoming more explicit. Commercials, even on those same “family-friendly” networks are becoming increasingly explicit. I remember being a young teenager and seeing the Hardee’s commercials that showcased women hardly dressed eating Memphis barbecue burgers and making sure I changed the channel whenever my toddler sister was in the room.
I also recall feeling uncomfortable while watching commercials with my dad that openly talk about erectile dysfunction and advertising a pill to get ones sexual life back on track. It has gotten to the point where topics that were taboo not too long ago are now recognized as societal norms.
The evolution from the first moving pictures to the immense business that film is today has not only witnessed dramatic technology developments but the content of moving pictures has radically evolved as well. By examining the gradual shifts of content on an upward explicit trend, the implications of the explicit trend on society and culture will be examined.
Throughout history of film, it is interesting to examine how human interaction is portrayed. Humans seem to be innately interested in human interaction and the phrase “sex sells” is not too far off the mark when it comes to marketing and entertainment. In fact, it seems to be that the phrase “sex sells” is the theme that some movie and motion picture developers have adopted throughout the evolution of film. As time has progressed, so has the explicit nature of pictures throughout the media.
For example, in the early stages of motion pictures, one would not have ever encountered scenes of a couple and a bed filmed in the same room. In the Classical Hollywood 1938 movie, Bringing Up Baby, Susan classically fakes that she is being attacked by the leopard, Baby, in order to get David over to her house. Susan is clearly flirting with David and her intentions are probably a little beyond inviting David over to help her with the leopard. David even says “this is probably the silliest thing that has ever happened to me.” Beyond David entering the premise of Susan’s house, there is never any scene that explicitly shows any of her intentions underlying sexual intentions.
Progressing up the ladder of explicit content (followed by a linear increase in time) the scene in which Susan invites David over is in stark contrast with the scene from The Graduate in which Mrs. Robinson invites Benjamen over to her house. When compared side by side, these two scenes differ greatly in explicit content. Not only is there a bed shown in The Graduate, but Mrs. Robinson is much more straightforward about her intentions. As she stands naked in front of Benjamin and tells him that he can call her if he changes his mind, this type of scene would’ve have been appalling in the early developments of motion pictures.
Today, explicit content has reached new levels. As pre-sale tickets of the movie Fifty Shades of Grey broke new records, thousands of people watched on screen a sexually deviant Christian Grey as he beat, tied up, and penetrated the naked body of Anastasia. Described as a “worldwide phenomenon”, women and men across the world watched as this film hit the screens.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6uHQx1RGvpg
The social implications of the upward trend of explicit content on screen may not yet be known, but are of significance when it comes to social development and the perpetuation of problems within society. By exposing mass amounts of people to increasingly explicit content (not just sexual content, but violent as well), it changes the way society operates. Is this the trend we want to be following?…