Mave wrote:Being more clean doesn't necessarily mean that the films were completely/significantly less devoid of any sexual content. At least, I didn't mean it that way. It would be silly to say that there was no pornography in the 30s or ppl didn't portray sex in the entertainment industry. Sexuality is always there: it's the nature of how it's presented that has changed, IMO. I would observe that the graphic level of it has increased....pointlessly too in many instances. Of course, pls consider that a personal opinion. Don't get me wrong, I'm not anti-sex or some wrinkled up prude. But sometimes, we really don't need to see the whole act played out in order to get the message "Oh btw, just so you know, they had sex. Yup, they really did. See? See? Can't you see that they went all the way? OK, maybe we need to remove more clothes to convince the audience that our characters had sex. Gotta get the message though, you know."
I agree. However, my point isn't that violence and sex should be censored. It is the opposite. People should understand what is right and wrong and be responsible for their action, which is why my high school English course requires student to read fiction books that involves rape scenes and fornication realistically (i.e. the stress of being a single mother in young age, the emotional turmoil thereafter, etc...)
But there is a definite trend from the media. In around the 50's, there is this big notion where romantic love is happiness and eloping is starting to become glorized in media. Maybe ignorant is a bliss, but as time goes by, media became more concerned about earning money than being responsible. And today, the media has became so regressed that morally questionable media can be seen on TV easily by kids, with guidance.
Mave wrote:Even if the acknowledgment of this trend may be denied in the U.S., I believe this to be true in some Asian countries (excluding Japan). A good part of the entertainment scene for Hong Kong, Chinese, Taiwanese and Indian films are getting a bit more fleshy (for the lack of a better term).
This trend is definitely most evident in the U.S. China, although becoming more open, is still very reserved about what can be shown on the media. But government can only do so much, especially when bribery becomes norm. Hong Kong and Taiwan, on the other hand, got most of the influences from Japan, which my points back to the topic. It is not religion differences as mentioned before, it is more about the changes of social value.