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Shooting Script
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"You have to be true to yourself as a writer, but I
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don't think you have a responsibility beyond that," said Brian Helgeland, the
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opening speaker at "Guns Don't Kill People ... Writers Do," a panel discussion
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sponsored by the Writers Guild of America earlier this month. "Hopefully that's
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enough, if you take yourself seriously." Enough for what or for whom? Helgeland
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didn't specify. The writer-director of the ultraviolent Mel Gibson movie
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Payback squirmed uncomfortably in his chair on a dais in a Santa Monica
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hotel ballroom a few hundred yards from the Pacific Ocean, pondering the
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question of whether people who make violent movies are morally responsible for
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inciting real-world violence. Dressed in frayed shorts and sandals, blond hair
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flowing, Helgeland looked as if he had stashed his surfboard behind the stage
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and couldn't wait to escape into the waves crashing outside.
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On the opposite end of the stage was Motion Picture
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Association of America Chairman Jack Valenti, suited and tied, camera-ready,
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and eager to pontificate. Other panelists included scripters of major screen
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mayhem: Steven De Souza ( Die Hard ); Callie Khouri ( Thelma and
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Louise ); Miguel Tejada-Flores ( Fright Night Part II ); William
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Mastrosimone ( Extremities ); Sy Gomberg ( When Willie Comes Marching
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Home ); moderator Dan Petrie Jr. ( Beverly Hills Cop ); and producer
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Sean Daniel ( The Mummy ). The audience was packed with worried industry
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insiders still reeling from President Clinton's just-announced call for a
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Justice Department/FTC investigation to determine if Hollywood markets violent
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product to children. (For this we need a federal investigation? Does anyone
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think it was over-17s who bought $162 million worth of tickets to The
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Matrix ?) The town was awash in rumors of imminent subpoenas, and talk of
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Democratic Sen. Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut's threats of criminal
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prosecution and censorship.
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Adopting the "cigarettes
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don't cause cancer" posture, studio heads have declined credit for encouraging
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children to commit murder. Apparently they were counting on Clinton--whose
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coffers are stuffed with Hollywood cash--to go easy on them. On Valenti's
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recommendation, they snubbed Clinton's invitation to a White House conference
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on violence in the media, letting slip their best chance to get out in front of
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the issue. Now, Clinton appeared to be punishing them for their hubris. "You
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turn down the president of the United States at your own peril," says one movie
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producer. "Valenti should know that. He worked for Lyndon Johnson."
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While the Hollywood suits block feelings of guilt with
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reiterations of their commitment to shareholders, the Writers Guild talk
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revealed a creative community roiled by emotions ranging from angry defiance to
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extreme remorse to abject terror. Sparring over their role in instigating
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high-school gun battles, they fell into lock step on one point: God save us
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from regulation by Bob Barr and Tom DeLay. If the First Amendment has lost
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luster elsewhere, it is ever the rallying cry in Hollywood, where free speech
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can be relied upon to protect profitable dreck. At the same time, this
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overwhelmingly liberal community, happy to jettison the Second Amendment, is
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steamed that Washington has gone soft on the gun lobby.
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"I feel that the
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viewpoint I just heard is a very dangerous ivory towerism," said Mastrosimone,
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the prickliest conscience in the group, countering Helgeland's "be true to
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yourself as a writer" remarks. "The people who say it's all our fault are
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extremists, and I think the people who say we have no responsibilities are also
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extremists. If we're really looking for the truth, we'll find it somewhere in
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between. It is unquestionable there is a cause-and-effect between what goes up
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onscreen and behavior--there are thousands of scientific studies since the '60s
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that people choose to ignore because it's really not lucrative to obey them.
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And we have become very spoiled because we enjoy this freedom, and we don't
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want anybody on the outside telling us what to do."
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De Souza was up next, a flinty showman who played the scene
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aggressively. "This is the first time I've ever volunteered to come and be a
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scapegoat," he said. De Souza disputed the link between screen violence and
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real-world violence but also ranted against gun proliferation, arguing that
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Japanese and British kids watch violent movies but don't go out and kill each
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other. Like a fifth-grader at show-and-tell, De Souza held up the Nazi
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propaganda magazine Signal and pointed out sanitized images of Hitler
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youth groups. "Here you had the most wholesome, upstanding media you can
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imagine, and meanwhile offstage is the most mechanized bloodbath in history,"
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he said. He spread the moral responsibility around, noting that legally the
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studio is the author of a movie. "I tell you, every picture I have done has
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come out more violent than what I wrote. I have sat at the screening of one of
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my movies and been stunned at the level of mayhem that somebody put onscreen.
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So now do I feel guilty?" He didn't answer his own question.
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Khouri, a native of
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Paducah, Ky., site of a major school shooting, cited the familiar litany of
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parental neglect, breakdown of education and community, and the Internet as
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causes of teen violence. Yet she was ambivalent about blaming Hollywood.
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"There's no one person that can be held responsible for this," she said. "But
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for us to sit here and say 'feed 'em a steady diet of whatever they want,' and
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then when they act out it's your fault ... it doesn't add up. We're trying to
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make sense out of something that will never make sense. People read The
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Catcher in the Rye and shoot John Lennon. There's always going to be
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somebody who is going to misinterpret something." Khouri added that she was
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stunned at Thelma and Louise 's first screening when the audience cheered
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the heroine for shooting a male attacker. "I had hoped for a completely
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different reaction from the audience, a realization that this character had
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just sealed her fate in a horrible way. I was terrified. And I realized that I
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can't control how my work is perceived." After Thelma and Louise , Khouri
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challenged herself to write a movie with no guns in it. "It's harder," she
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says.
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"Do we want the world to be as frightened as so many of us
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are, and so many children are?" asked Gomberg, who organized the Committee to
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End Violence after the Jonesboro, Ark., killings. "Do we have the right to
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impose this gun culture on the world? They all want to be like us! I don't
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think we do." Gomberg advocated the elimination of "excessive or gratuitous or
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unpunished" violence in movies and television. De Souza, rankled, barked, "When
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you say unpunished violence it reminds me of the old green code." Undeterred,
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Gomberg continued, "We have to aim our sights higher. ... I hate to use the
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term 'aim sights' ... but the easiest thing in the world to write is a villain
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you get the audience so involved in hating that you scream inside for the hero
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to demolish him. Creatively we can find ways to get the same kind of tensions
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and passions going."
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"By that definition
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Richard
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the Third is a terrible, evil play," responded De Souza,
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knowing that no discussion of violence in art is complete without an invocation
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of the Bard. "It spends all of its time making us hate, hate that villain. And
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there's a gory, bloody end and a lot of bodies. Let's not even go to Titus
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Andronicus !" That got a big laugh, which encouraged Helgeland to drop the
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other bit of Shakespearean boilerplate: "What if a teen-ager who was hopelessly
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in love saw Romeo and Juliet and decided to kill himself? Should we not
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perform Romeo and Juliet any more?"
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Patiently awaiting his moment, Valenti erupted in a burst
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of his usual flowery oratory. "If I've learned one thing in the movie business
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and the world of politics," he intoned, "it is that the First Amendment--the 45
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spare, unadorned words, bleached dry of all ambiguity--is the one clause in the
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Constitution that guarantees all others. And it's not easy to be a First
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Amendment person, because then you have to allow into this marketplace that
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which you believe to be soiling and meretricious and tawdry and unwholesome and
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sometimes vile. And then sometimes people get so vexed, they want to call their
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congressman and say, 'pass a law to stop all this stuff.' But I always say to
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this person, be wary and be cautious. Before you make that call, remember that
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when a tyrant first appears he always comes as your protector." Hoots of
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approval rose up from the crowd.
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Billed as a session of
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self-scrutiny, the discussion was turning into a call to arms against enemies
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of the First Amendment. Daniel, wrapping up the session, soberly reminded his
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colleagues that those who have abused their absolute freedoms by making movies
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that are soiling and unwholesome have only themselves to blame if Hollywood's
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era of unregulated bliss is over. "All of us have to understand that we are
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citizens whether we like it or not," he warned. "Both Steve and Jack have
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rendered articulate and righteous defenses of the Bill of Rights and the
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Constitution. But none of us should leave the room without an understanding
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that for parents all over the country, the fear is real, the problems of
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raising kids are real."
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The ballroom emptied, leaving the day's topic frustratingly
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unprobed. No one had bothered to press Valenti on whether the government should
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properly give more weight to the safety of its citizens than to free speech.
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Neither had there been any mention of the roots of Hollywood's love affair with
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violence. As writer-actor Harry Shearer (who spoke later on a panel on comedy)
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pointed out, "The thing that is rarely mentioned is that because this is a
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puritanical society and you can't show sex, we eroticize violence. It started
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with The Wild Bunch : We sexualized violence, we made it beautiful."
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Was Littleton a watershed? Under pressure from
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President Clinton, the leading theater trade association says it will now bar
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the under-17 crowd from R-rated movies; rumors have it that the MPAA will be
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stricter about slapping R ratings onto violent movies; Disney plans to stop
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featuring guns in its marketing materials; and studios have canceled the
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development of some teen horror movies.
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Are these serious measures by moviemakers and
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politicians? With so much money and so many votes at stake, both Hollywood and
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Washington are driven by fear and committed to appearances. If there were a
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little bit less finger pointing and a little more assumption of responsibility
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for a problem whose causes are many, it would be easier to have faith.
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