Film violence You think that there are cases where you are considering movies more seriously than now or infringing individual freedom. Films are often criticized as violent crime, most notably the influencing factor of murder. This movie is believed to have affected many killers in attention-drawn cases, such as the murder of Jamie Bourg related to media's "Children's Play 3". The other is when a 14-year-old Texas boy tried to be famous as a "natural killer" star with a girl in her head. I agree.
The central issue of media violence and movie violence is the need for strong scrutiny. Among the articles discovered by the New York Times, politicians said, cautious about restricting movie violence. This article is clearly based on events in the US Congress, but this is most relevant to the simple fact that the most influential movies are made in the United States. This article outlines the limits of violence against minors. Members of parliament not only criticized this movie but also condemned all the entertainment aspects of music and video games with meaningless violent explanation and regarded the entire entertainment industry as "irresponsible". For minors, they believe that access to such entertainment should be severely restricted by members.
Violence by television and movie Finally, in survey 3, we found that violence in video games has a more unique relationship with the increasing physical aggressiveness with the passage of time. The latter finding is consistent with the violent content difference between video games (a few speech attacks) and television and movies (attacks by quite a few words). A recent review of all areas of media violence (Anderson et al., 2003) concluded that there is some evidence that the variables are relaxed but concluded that the risks and vulnerabilities are different, but the overall evidence The strength is much lower than fairly common ones. Evidence Medium strong negative effects from exposure to violence
Over the past 40 years there have been more than 1,000 studies of the effects of TV and movie violence. As a result of investigating the influence of television violence on aggression, it is consistent that television violence increases aggression and social unrest, promotes the world's "average view", and adversely affects real-world behavior It was indicated. Criminal scholar Matthew Robinson pointed out in his book "Criminal and Criminal Justice Media Coverage" that the study of the influence of media on violence is very evident in their discovery and impact on society (Robinson , 2011, p. 135). ) He quoted a study on children's exposure to violent media, which led to aggressive behavior as evidence. Criminal Ray Surette agrees that media violence relates to aggressiveness in his groundbreaking work "Media, Crime and Criminal Justice", but provides a subtle explanation. He said,