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GENERAL DISCUSSIONS
Joss' fascination with torture ?
Friday, December 24, 2004 2:56 PM
TERAPH
Quote:Originally posted by PurpleBelly: Does anyone have anything to say about Joss and torture?
Quote:The original poster would probably like to know.
Quote:Original poster: Does Joss have some fascination with it do you think?
Quote:Original poster: Or is it just a great topic for character development?
Quote:Original poster: What do you think?...And how well were they done?
Quote:Originally posted by PurpleBelly: How about the torture of characters with whom we do not identify?
Friday, December 24, 2004 4:17 PM
DEWSHINE
Friday, December 24, 2004 5:07 PM
THESOMNAMBULIST
Quote:Originally posted by teraph: Quote:Original poster: What do you think?...And how well were they done? Do you mean, "how accurate" or "how well did the show use torture as a story device"?
Friday, December 24, 2004 6:09 PM
TLACOOK
Friday, December 24, 2004 6:59 PM
Quote:Originally posted by TheSomnambulist: I was curious what the concensus was on this topic. Wether it (torture) is viewed as: *Joss Whedon actually having an obsession with torture, or *Joss Whedon regarding torture as a convenient device for furthering the narrative.
Friday, December 24, 2004 9:05 PM
ANKHAGOGO
Quote:Originally posted by teraph: I'll close with a list. To my memory, these are all the acts of physical torture (ranging from the threat of torture to extreme torture) in Mutant Enemy shows.
Saturday, December 25, 2004 8:01 AM
Quote:Originally posted by Ankhagogo: We also included Dawn by Doc (cutting her up on the tower) ... Xander by Ashanti over the seal in the basement
Quote:Willow by that creepy thing in the cave (pulling off strips of her stomach --EW)
Quote:Oz by the Initiative (I'm willing to hear arguements that this is a stretch)
Quote:Lorne by Wolfram & Hart (we saw the damage, but not the actual brainsucking)
Quote:Cordy by Billy, guided by W&H
Quote:Justine by Wesley (if you count him locking her in a closet for a summer as torture)
Quote:Unless we're not counting Tara's brain getting sucked.
Quote:I'd say there's a pattern there.:) I just have no idea what it means.
Quote:I'll say it again -- I think the mental torture is worse to watch.
Saturday, December 25, 2004 2:06 PM
Quote:Originally posted by teraph: Quote:Originally posted by Ankhagogo: We also included Dawn by Doc (cutting her up on the tower) ... Xander by Ashanti over the seal in the basement Quote:I personally wouldn't include sacrifices as torture. I never got the sense that either of these cases involved someone desiring their victim to suffer, only that they die in the proper fashion. See, I would. I don't necessarily consider torture as a desire to see someone suffer -- I think inflicting pain on someone in small steps (with or without the intended end result being death) is torture. I thought Dawn and Xander looked as if they thought they were being tortured--and actually, now that I'm thinking back, it seems like both Doc and Ashanti looked as if they were enjoying themselves. Quote:Lorne by Wolfram & Hart (we saw the damage, but not the actual brainsucking) Quote:Well, we never saw it, so I don't kow how long it took. Was it just an quick act of violence, or was it torture? Are we going to try an seperate batttery from torture. Is there a line? It's Wolfram & Hart -- I just assume it's torture. >:) Quote:Cordy by Billy, guided by W&H Quote:That was brain torture, wasn't it? (I barely remember that episode. I seem to recall W&H doing a couple of brain tortures on Cordy. I completely forgot to list those.) Oh yeah, she got locked into her visions in Season One, didn't she? But there was definitely a manifestation of physical injury on both occasions, and again -- it's W&H. I will always assume the worst intentions of them. Quote:Justine by Wesley (if you count him locking her in a closet for a summer as torture) Quote:Nah. That's just imprisonment. I wouldn't count that as totrure, no matter how unjustified her imprisonment was. Yeah, I actually agree -- but I suspect that, had it taken much longer to find Angel, there may have been torture involved. Hard to tell with angry Wes. Quote:Unless we're not counting Tara's brain getting sucked. Quote:I wouldn't. I don't think we did, either. I just remembered it as I was typing. Quote:I'd say there's a pattern there.:) I just have no idea what it means. Quote:I think it means the same things as the regular use of rape and incest in procedural and cop shows. It's a useful writing tool for showing how cruel people can be to each other. There is almost an audience issue too. I think viewers of Whedon shows would be more willing to accept torture than rape/incest, and viewers of the the crime shows would be more willing to accept the sex crimes than the torture. (And by "accept" I don't mean "enjoy". I mean only that they would find it a more believable part of the story's world.) I agree, especially if you take into consideration how people reacted to the whole Buffy-Spike (or Wes/Lilah, for that matter) "relationship", or to Early's threats to Kaylee in Objects in Space. Lots of people were mildly to extremely disturbed by those things, while very few responded in the same way to War Stories or whichever one it was where Angelus tortured Giles. "I know your name, jackass!"
Quote:I personally wouldn't include sacrifices as torture. I never got the sense that either of these cases involved someone desiring their victim to suffer, only that they die in the proper fashion.
Quote:Well, we never saw it, so I don't kow how long it took. Was it just an quick act of violence, or was it torture? Are we going to try an seperate batttery from torture. Is there a line?
Quote:That was brain torture, wasn't it? (I barely remember that episode. I seem to recall W&H doing a couple of brain tortures on Cordy. I completely forgot to list those.)
Quote:Nah. That's just imprisonment. I wouldn't count that as totrure, no matter how unjustified her imprisonment was.
Quote:I wouldn't.
Quote:I think it means the same things as the regular use of rape and incest in procedural and cop shows. It's a useful writing tool for showing how cruel people can be to each other. There is almost an audience issue too. I think viewers of Whedon shows would be more willing to accept torture than rape/incest, and viewers of the the crime shows would be more willing to accept the sex crimes than the torture. (And by "accept" I don't mean "enjoy". I mean only that they would find it a more believable part of the story's world.)
Saturday, December 25, 2004 2:59 PM
GWENHARKER
Saturday, December 25, 2004 4:54 PM
Quote: Why are we assuming that the obsession (if there is one) is Joss'?
Saturday, December 25, 2004 5:22 PM
Quote:Originally posted by teraph: First thing: Merry Christmas.
Quote: That said, I think many dramatic writers, and especially horror/dark drama writers would consider torture part of their "toolkit" of options. It, alongside sex crimes like rape, incest and sexual degradation (e.g., sex for drugs) are some of the darkest parts of human experience, and thus fodder for writers. (Cannibalism is dark too, but I don't see that very often on TV.) How many TV serial killers have tortured or raped their victims? How many cop shows have used incest as a twist in a case? Shows like Law & Order: SVU and the Profiler were based entirely around horrible people doing horrible things.
Quote: I mention Mutant Enemy, because a room full of writers comes up with these scripts, so being able to pin who suggested torture is hard. But I honestly don't Joss is obsessed with it. We may have to wait and see if it shows up in "Serenity" or not.
Saturday, December 25, 2004 5:58 PM
Saturday, December 25, 2004 6:52 PM
CARDIE
Quote:Originally posted by tlacook: From what I have found, people who didn't live through theier twenties yet (and possibly into their midthirties) had much more difficulty with the destructive relationship motif of season 6.
Saturday, December 25, 2004 7:11 PM
Sunday, December 26, 2004 4:22 AM
Quote:May I ask how old you are? From what I have found, people who didn't live through theier twenties yet (and possibly into their midthirties) had much more difficulty with the destructive relationship motif of season 6. I thought the whole season was spot on and very very realistic.
Sunday, December 26, 2004 6:08 AM
AMYEL
Quote:Originally posted by GwenHarker: Season four, for me, was the begining of the twisting of Buffy's character. She's out of high school and three episodes into the fourth season, she's sleeping with someone?
Quote:Here's my other bothering bit with that season. SPIKE RAPED HER AND THEN IT WAS IMMEDIETLY FORGOTTEN BECAUSE 'OH! SPIKE DOESN'T HAVE A SOUL!'
Quote: and whomever got to the helm at Angel (I think it was Greenwalt, who really had no experiance running a show)
Sunday, December 26, 2004 6:32 AM
REEQUEEN
Quote:So yeah, ummm, I'm 16 and I look at things diffrent from you. But it pisses me off when people say that because I'm not the only one with the same viewpoint on that subject. Like I said, I know ALOT of people much older than myself who feel like that.
Sunday, December 26, 2004 12:20 PM
Sunday, December 26, 2004 5:36 PM
Quote:GwenHarker, I think a lot of your issues have to do with shippiness, which is kind of a shame... Spike isn't a replacement for Angel. I love those two vampires more than I should (especially together *ahem*) but they both represent the journey to redemption, in two totally different ways.
Sunday, December 26, 2004 6:02 PM
Monday, December 27, 2004 5:43 AM
Quote:One of the beautiful things about the writing on Mutant Enemy shows is that people from different backgrounds and life experiences can take away different things and different levels of meaning in the same things.
Monday, December 27, 2004 6:05 AM
Monday, December 27, 2004 7:15 AM
Quote:Originally posted by tlacook: Once again, I am late to the party and others have said what I wanted to say without being as bitchy about it as I would have been. Xiexie.
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