QUOTE (Peter T Chattaway @ Jan 16 2008, 06:42 PM)

Well, the first movie that came to MY mind was The Mist.
Didn't see it. But that character did come up in every review of the film I read; so people did notice how that negative stereotype played. The film bombed, too, if I recall. Message sent? You tell me.
QUOTE
No, Shooting Dogs is not a "Hollywood movie" by any stretch
I very much pointed out its independent and British roots. I did.
I've got three fundamental assumptions in my thinking on this:
First, "Hollywood" is an industry, not a particular filmmaker or studio. So I'm not being "glib" when I say Hollywood makes what sells. That's a business reality. Now, individuals within that industry that may have an anti-Christian agenda, but not the industry itself. SDG, if you want to find this a glib or insignificant distinction, that's fine by me. But you're going to have to interpret my comments in light of that presumption. When I interview filmmakers, I talk to individuals, not to an industry. Just like when I talk to you, I talk to an individual, not to the Catholic Church. Now, if you want me to treat you like an institution rather than like an individual, I'll just decline, thanks.
So... very often, when films aimed at wide audiences fail, it's precisely because individual filmmakers forget that the film has to sell to a wide audience, and their personal agendas get in the way. (Can anyone think of a certain military/political genre that has lately illustrated this point?)
Second, "Hollywood" sells and promotes a lot of films that are not made in "Hollywood" itself; so, again from a business perspective, I find the usual definition of "Hollywood" bandied about by Christians to be unuseful -- you know, "films that are made in Los Angeles by denizens of Los Angeles about the values that Los Angeles people are invested in." Cause if you use that definition, you're really talking about, say, one sixth of the films actually released every year, most of which are R-rated and gross less than 30 million. (The Last Mimzy, while rated PG, was a notable exception with regard to ratings; but it bombed spectacularly, nonetheless, precisely because Bob Shay forgot that Los Angeles values do not sell in the broad market.)
I think a more useful definition of a "Hollywood" film is "any film distributed, either theatrically or on DVD, by any of the Big Seven distributors (and not by their botique labels)." That is, films that the industry thinks have a chance of being widely successful outside niche markets. And from this standpoint, you're going to be hard pressed to identify any specific agenda in Hollywood films -- other than that of the general public, who buys these films. (And from this standpoint, Beyond the Gates counts because it was heavily promoted by Fox for its American DVD release.)
Third, Hollywood, as a place and an industry, is populated by a lot of very unhappy and messed up people -- who, once they become successful and happy (if they do) make very different films and play very different roles than they did when they were struggling, young, angry, and messed up.
You wanna see the kinds of films that come out of Hollywood change for the better?
Then make a positive difference in the lives of those people. The films will change, and change dramatically. Picketing and protesting and whining about how poorly we're being treated won't accomplish that a whit.
So, no. I don't think I'm being glib at all. I think I'm being very analytical, pragmatic, and realistic. The world changes by changing people, and understanding those people as people not as faceless cogs in faceless, soulless industry.
Other than that, SDG, I pretty much agree with everything you wrote in your last post. At the same time, I pretty much agree with everything in Mando's last post, too.