Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Speaking of Clive Owen...

...and why the h#$$ not?...I was flipping channels last night and happened across Croupier on one of the movie channels. I’d been meaning to rent this film for a long time, ever since I heard people touting it as proof that Owen would have made a terrific James Bond (he did look pretty awesome in a tux). Personally, I’m more than happy with Daniel Craig as 007. His performance was bloody brilliant in Casino Royale, but Clive would have been great, too.

Croupier has some interesting, offbeat characters and a cool neo-noir vibe, and I’m pretty much always a sucker for a movie about a writer (see: Johnny Depp in Secret Window—I’ve been told some of the stuff coming out of his mouth sounded just like me...unnervingly so).

Not to give too much away, but I could definitely relate to Owen’s character when his girlfriend ripped the grittier, more realistic take on his story in favor of a previous version that had, in her opinion, a more likeable protagonist. Jeesh, everybody’s a critic.

To sum up, I liked the movie a lot and I kind of dug Clive with the bleached out do. But a blond Bond? Nah, that’d never go over.

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Wednesday, July 4, 2007

Forensic Fetishism in the Modern Thriller

I’ve been reading a lot of articles and blogs lately about the prevalence of what many consider to be gratuitous and one-upmanship gore in modern thrillers and neo-noir/hard-boiled mysteries. The two catch phrases that seem to be getting a lot of attention are torture porn and forensic fetishism.

So I decided to put this question to best-selling suspense author Kay David:

Me: Do you feel that violence in many of today’s thrillers has reached the ‘torture porn’ level? In other words, are writers using graphic scenes for shock value and/or titillation with little regard for plot advancement or characterization?

KD: I'm not offended by the graphic violence in novels because most readers plug their own version of what's happening into the story, no matter what the words on the page say. The writer just sets them off in a certain direction and their imagination takes it from there. Do some writers take it too far? I don't think so but if they do, the reader can always vote with their wallet by not buying the book. The situation is no worse than some writers who use sex scenes to the same end. I'd rather use my imagination there, too, so I simply don't buy those kinds of books. I think there will always be a market for them, however.
Photo: tjlewis

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