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The Dark Knight taints
our children's world view
Jenny McCartney
Telegraph (UK)
July 26, 2008
If I were ten years old, would I be badgering my parents
to take me to see the latest Batman film, The Dark
Knight? You bet I would. It’s the latest and biggest
release in the superhero genre, which children instantly
understand as a direct appeal to their special
interests. It’s also touched with the alluring
suggestion of forbidden fruit: the maniacal, deranged
face of The Joker, grippingly played by the late Heath
Ledger, leers from posters all over town.
If I were the parent who relented and took a
ten-year-old child to see The Dark Knight, would I be
sorry? Once again, you bet I would. It’s different from
other superhero films, as fans are quick to point out.
Certainly, there are surprises in its swooping camera
angles and darkened, ominous screen. But the greatest
surprise of all – even for me, after eight years spent
working as a film critic – has been the sustained level
of intensely sadistic brutality throughout the film.
I will attempt to confine my plot spoilers to the
opening: the film begins with a heist carried out by men
in sinister clown masks. As each clown completes a task,
another shoots him point-blank in the head. The scene
ends with a clown – The Joker - stuffing a bomb into a
wounded bank employee’s mouth.
After the murderous clown heist, things slip downhill. A
man’s face is filleted by a knife, and another’s is
burned half-off. A man’s eye is slammed into a pencil. A
bomb can be seen crudely stitched inside another man’s
stomach, which subsequently explodes. A trussed-up man
is bound to a chair and set alight atop a pile of
banknotes. A plainly terrorised child is threatened at
gunpoint by a man with a melted face. It is all
intensely realistic. Oh but don’t worry, folks: there
isn’t any nudity.
What’s the problem? I can already hear some people
asking. It’s all a comic-book fantasy, and comic-books
are well known for their surreal, cartoonish bursts of
violence. But the director, Christopher Nolan, hasn’t
sought to ramp up the cartoonish aspects of his
superhero story, as other directors before him have. He
has tried instead to make the violence and fear as
believable as possible, and in this he has succeeded.
The Dark Knight, however, has been rated 12A by the
British Board of Film Classification, which means that
although the BBFC believes it is best suited to children
aged twelve and over, any under-twelve can see it
provided he or she is accompanied by an adult. Cinemas
are even holding parent-and-baby screenings.
The 12A certificate, a relatively recent innovation, is
a piece of fudge designed to deflect responsibility from
the BBFC on to British parents. I have some sympathy
with the BBFC regarding the origins of this fudge. In
2002, the BBFC took a stand on Spider-Man, a hugely
hyped Hollywood release: it decided that it contained
unsuitable levels of violence for under-12s, and
therefore awarded it a "12" certificate, meaning that
under-12s should not be allowed into cinemas to see it.
A public storm erupted; children and many parents were
furious; and a number of councils announced their
intention to defy the ban. At first the BBFC stoutly
defended itself, saying that "Hollywood has carried out
an aggressive world-wide marketing campaign aimed at
young children when the film is not suitable for them."
And then, fed up with being everyone’s most hated Aunt
Sally, it invented the 12A certificate, which translates
as a fed-up, institutional shrug of the shoulders.
It’s been busy shrugging ever since. Spider-Man now
looks like Bambi when set next to The Dark Knight. Even
since 2002, the public’s willingness to expose children
to previously unthinkable levels of screen violence has
soared, and the BBFC finds itself virtually powerless to
stop it.
Casino Royale (2006), the most recent James Bond film,
was also given a 12A certificate: young boys in
particular are attracted to Bond just as strongly as
adults are. Many well-meaning parents, lulled by
memories of the stylised, somewhat camp nature of Bond
films in the past – and perhaps reassured by the softer
12A rating – were minded to indulge their younger
children in a sophisticated treat. But Casino Royale,
starring Daniel Craig, was in fact a new kind of Bond
film, shot like a realistic action thriller.
Parents and their open-mouthed children found themselves
watching a scene in which a bloodied Bond, stripped
naked and tied to a chair, is tortured by having his
genitals beaten with a length of rope. A friend of mine
was somewhat dismayed afterwards to witness his two
young boys, aged nine and seven, diligently re-enacting
the torture scene with an outsize teddy bear strapped to
a chair and a flail constructed from a knotted dressing
gown cord.
Even in fantasy films, such as the
Harry Potter series, the competition among directors is
to ratchet up the level of "darkness": in the 2005 film
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, the intensity of
the scenes involving the evil Lord Voldemort and his
servants the Death Eaters caused the BBFC to upgrade its
rating from a PG to a 12A.
I believe, however, that there is some distinction
between violence which is clearly fantastical in origin,
such as that in Harry Potter, and that which is
realistic and sadistic in tone, such as that in The Dark
Knight. The former might well bother younger children
afterwards, and even give them horrifying nightmares –
scarcely desirable in itself - but the latter is more
likely to taint their fundamental vision of the world
and adult norms of behaviour. The intensity of violence
in The Dark Knight is a grimly logical progression from
the sort of distilled brutality that has rapidly become
the norm in films rated 15 and 18: the only difference
is that now small children are permitted to watch it
too.
As a reviewer, I naturally understand that a degree of
violence is an unavoidable force in cinema, as it is in
life, and that a talented director can employ it to say
something meaningful. Yet since 2000, when I first began
reviewing films for The Sunday Telegraph, sporadic
scenes have brought me up short, because they seemed to
signal a sudden, significant shift in the director’s
moral perspective. One such came in 2004, while watching
the Tony Scott film Man on Fire. Denzel Washington, an
actor of great natural dignity, plays a jaded former
assassin who becomes a bodyguard for a wealthy little
girl: when the child is abducted, he embarks on a
relentless quest for revenge upon those who did it. In
the course of this bloody quest – and with the assumed
approval of the audience – he shoves a bomb up the
rectum of a Mexican conspirator, and then triggers its
explosion. Washington, I should emphasise, remains the
film’s hero.
Once, Quentin Tarantino was the edgy enfant terrible of
Hollywood. Now he is a member of its establishment,
encouraging younger, mainstream "torture porn" directors
such as Eli Roth to push the boundaries of explicit,
ingenious cruelty ever further. Increasingly, extreme
screen violence is used not as a necessary adjunct to a
greater point, but as the pleasurable point in itself.
Wanted, this summer’s otherwise risible action
blockbuster starring Angelina Jolie and James McAvoy,
has as its theme the murderous adventures of a
fraternity of assassins. McAvoy, again the hero, is
portrayed as a hopeless nobody until he "finds himself"
by unleashing his killing streak and is thereby
empowered.
The Joker, too, croons over his own penchant for knife
killing: "Guns are too quick. You can’t savour all the
little emotions." He’s not officially the hero, but he
might as well be: next to him, Batman pales into
insignificance.
Britain appears to be gulping down entertainment values
wholesale from a Hollywood intent upon mining the profit
margin from barbarism. America, for all its manifold
strengths, is still a country in which the population
can be roused to a frenzy of condemnation by the sight
of Janet Jackson’s escaped nipple on the Super Bowl
show, but views the sight of a bound man being torched
to death as good all-round family entertainment.
Just as notable as the burgeoning violence in popular
entertainment itself, however, is the rage directed at
anyone who dares to question it. Earlier this year, I
wrote what I thought was a fairly balanced piece
criticising – not all video games – but extremely
violent ones such as the 18-rated Manhunt 2, which the
BBFC repeatedly attempted to ban before being over-ruled
in court. The gaming websites went wild with furious
responses from game-lovers. There was a smattering of
well-put points, but numerous other responses were
intent upon telling me variously to "f*** off"; that I
was a "silly c***" for raising the issue, or that I
deserved my "skull caved in Manhunt-style". It was clear
that, whatever the constant playing of violent computer
games had taught many such enthusiasts, it was not the
ability to engage thoughtfully with a differing view.
An echo of the same phenomenon can already be seen in
the US, where any film critic who expresses measured
dislike of The Dark Knight faces hundreds of intensely
hostile on-line responses. The more violent the source
of entertainment, the more vitriolic its fans grow in
defence of it: there is a whiff of the enraged mob at
Tyburn, furious at anyone who attacks its right to
thrilling, primal pleasures.
Is there a link between screen violence and actual
violence? Fans of violent films will tell you –
frequently in the most aggressive terms – that there is
not. Yet we know that children are, to greater and
lesser degrees, highly imitative of what they see. We
know that there is escalating public concern about
violent crime, particularly knife crime, among
teenagers. And we know that entertainment aimed at young
people is becoming markedly more violent. My generation
was terrified by the Child Catcher in Chitty Chitty Bang
Bang; the current one is diverted with torture and
agonising death.
Little boys have always played with
swords and guns. But they did not always play at beating
a prisoner’s genitals with a rope, or stitching a live
bomb inside a man’s stomach. For that innovation we must
thank Hollywood, the industrious factory of dreams, now
frequently devoted to churning out nightmares. The poet
WB Yeats once wrote "In dreams begins responsibility".
Yet Hollywood will never take responsibility for its
most brutal dreams so long as the paying public still
flocks to the theatre of cruelty.
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