Eric wrote:I take it you didn't watch Kick-Ass for similar reasons?
No, that's a comic book that I had been following so I watched it.. Also Matthew Vaughn (Kick-Ass director and writer) is more hit and... neutral? I don't know, I don't dislike anything by him that I've seen. I'm not really sure how Kick-Ass factors into anything I've said, though. The movie that I dislike the most by Vaughn is X-Men: First Class which is arguably still a good movie.
Edit: Also Kick-Ass is a fun, mostly meaningless movie. Yes there are some points it's trying to make but it's a very superficial movie and taking it for more than that is probably a mistake. Quentin Tarantino seems to enjoy having deeper meanings in his movies, so reading into them and expecting things out of them shouldn't be a completely foreign concept. Part of that is the creation of discourse, which is never an innately negative thing. Look, it wasn't my intention to pan this movie that I admittedly haven't seen or say anything about its quality so I wasn't really expecting flak over it.. I'm just remarking on what I've been told about its use of language and what that means to some people.
Anarky asked for thoughts on an issue so I gave them.. I'm not shitting on the movie you enjoyed as much as I'm commenting on what it apparently symbolizes. Don't put the words and thoughts of all the people who are up in arms about it on me. I'm mostly just arguing their point. Film should be a medium that challenges people and gets them talking.. something Quentin Tarantino basically never fails at.