The Greatest Scene Ever Committed to Film

Ummmm...yeah...this one is weird. I guess the kids wouldn't stay off the grass.
siftbotsays...

Promoting this video and sending it back into the queue for one more try; last queued Monday, October 24th, 2011 1:33pm PDT - promote requested by ctrlaltbleach.

spoco2says...

Pretty horrible really... I mean, it's horrible on a just purely 'Holy crap that's terribly made with little or no regard to quality'... but also horrible that people would think that that kind of violence towards kids is entertaining. Especially bits like the kid having the gun in his mouth and blowing the back of his brains out, that's pretty low.

Ryjkyjsays...

>> ^spoco2:

Pretty horrible really... I mean, it's horrible on a just purely 'Holy crap that's terribly made with little or no regard to quality'... but also horrible that people would think that that kind of violence towards kids is entertaining. Especially bits like the kid having the gun in his mouth and blowing the back of his brains out, that's pretty low.


While I can see your point spoco. I don't think you should underestimate the possibility that these kids had a really, really good time participating in this. And they also probably learned a lot. Kids love doing this sort of thing (some of them anyway) and they probably learned a lot from participating in filming too. No matter how you raise your children, chances are that at some point, they're going to do something like create an imaginative death scene that might be disturbing if taken the wrong way, but is actually really fun.

And it's also what helps them to separate fantasy from reality. Some of the kids in this scene, for the rest of their childhoods, might see something scary with one of their friends and be able to say something like, "see there! the camera cut out there for a second so they could replace the pitchfork with a prop! The whole thing is totally fake!"

I totally understand why you wouldn't want other children to watch this. But the reason that kids do things like this is precisely because they aren't, in reality, "brainwashed zombie teens."

MarineGunrocksays...

Low? I thought it was funny with the smiley face and all. >> ^spoco2:

Pretty horrible really... I mean, it's horrible on a just purely 'Holy crap that's terribly made with little or no regard to quality'... but also horrible that people would think that that kind of violence towards kids is entertaining. Especially bits like the kid having the gun in his mouth and blowing the back of his brains out, that's pretty low.

Quboidsays...

When I saw the title, I was going to suggest that you haven't seen the scene in The Black Swan where Natalie Portman and Mila Kunis make out.

But no, this actually is better. Fair play. This is approaching Hawk The Slayer quality.

Quboidsays...

>> ^Quboid:

When I saw the title, I was going to suggest that you haven't seen the scene in The Black Swan where Natalie Portman and Mila Kunis make out.
But no, this actually is better. Fair play. This is approaching Hawk The Slayer quality.


<< Insert deliciously inappropriate masturbation joke >>

spoco2says...

>> ^Ryjkyj:

>> ^spoco2:
Pretty horrible really... I mean, it's horrible on a just purely 'Holy crap that's terribly made with little or no regard to quality'... but also horrible that people would think that that kind of violence towards kids is entertaining. Especially bits like the kid having the gun in his mouth and blowing the back of his brains out, that's pretty low.

While I can see your point spoco. I don't think you should underestimate the possibility that these kids had a really, really good time participating in this. And they also probably learned a lot. Kids love doing this sort of thing (some of them anyway) and they probably learned a lot from participating in filming too. No matter how you raise your children, chances are that at some point, they're going to do something like create an imaginative death scene that might be disturbing if taken the wrong way, but is actually really fun.
And it's also what helps them to separate fantasy from reality. Some of the kids in this scene, for the rest of their childhoods, might see something scary with one of their friends and be able to say something like, "see there! the camera cut out there for a second so they could replace the pitchfork with a prop! The whole thing is totally fake!"
I totally understand why you wouldn't want other children to watch this. But the reason that kids do things like this is precisely because they aren't, in reality, "brainwashed zombie teens."


No, my point isn't so much that it's horrible for the kids involved, I know kids like to do stuff like that, I sure did when I was a kid... it's more, what bloody adult thinks this is a good idea to make, with view to other adults thinking it's entertaining to watch?

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