his diagnosis of why the youth get rowdy and violent is spot on, this is a man that remembers his own youth and how he felt back then, and has re-analyzed that confused period of his life now as an adult, in contrast the other older gentleman has lost all touch with his childhood self and seems to view the kids with a lack of empathy or understanding
The people asserting that media is responsible for rebellious behavior in youth conveniently forget what it was like to be young and desiring to rebel against _something._ Its far easier to blame media than it is to admit shoddy parenting is the root cause of youth rebelliousness
@@andystegall7407 You're wrong. And nobody has forgotten anything from their youth. Media REINFORCES the WORST trying and self-destructive parts that - it is true - are a natural part of growing up. They throw gasoline on an already raging fire. And they do it for a quick buck.
Welles would have despaired profoundly if he had lived to see how Hollywood has CONTRIBUTED to the theft of our children's lives with its gratuitous violence and hyper-sexualized stories. A brilliant film like 'The Third Man' could not be made today because it wouldn't contain enough lurid sexual displays OR excessive violence.
If he were, he would have added this, I submit: She asks of the "glorification" of violence and thus loads the question with a suspect assumption Orson and others often miss. The correct response is to say, "No, the movies show violence under various circumstances, as crimes, as self-defense, as revenge, and so on. What evidence do you have that it is thereby "glorified"? Look and see first, for it may be the exact opposite at times. Your question is flawed with a false assumption."
no, they weren't having a discussion (Orson was). They were trying to take the piss out of the US. Not that the US doesn't have issues, etc., but it's rather unseemly for one country to talk down about another country's culture. I'm not a fan when I see it in the US (ala Fox News, etc.), nor, in this case, by the Brits. It's always nice to see pseudo intellectuals being taken down a notch or two by a real artist. As Welles said, Shakespeare didn't seem to incite juvenile delinquency and the pablum they were spewing was just so much bs.
Don’t blame the mainstream media for it. They may fan the flames, yes, but this continued never ending crusade by each generation who thinks the younger one is worse than ever is very much conceived in the hearts of individuals. People have been perpetuating this myth long, long, LONG before there ever was a mass media.
it seems to be that way on almost any youtube interview clip of a well-spoken actor from a bygone era. it's really annoying, isn't it? all this bizarre posturing... i watched a marlon brando interview recently and nearly every damn comment was 'being an actor, i know personally what he's talking about. the interviewer is an idiot, he's brilliant. we act as a survival mechanism and blah blah blah..." what freaking assholes.
+chesterbesterfeild Indubitably. Is it not a fact that TH-cam-molder of mass opinion though it is, or has become, is in every essence just a shameful ignominious mirror that which reflects not wanton eudaimonia, but rather our most prurient desires? That is to say, where are the boobies!
You’re right, and there will always be people like that. But there are also people who genuinely like to think, and if there’s any lingering benefit to social media, it’s the potential to interact with them.
After the release of the 1986 movie Top Gun, the US Navy enlistment increased by 8 percent. Military propaganda in film does cause people to join the military. I don’t think Texas chainsaw massacre causes any murders but when propaganda in film is intentional and well crafted it does work.
You may think that you can, but your subconscious definitely can’t. That goes for EVERYONE (including kids). Be aware of what you fill your mind up with, your mental consumption habits can tell you a lot on what you chose to focus on. . .
@@mohammadtausifrafi8277 You decide on the value of a statement on its own merit, not based on whether it comes from a fictional character or a real person.
The fact that the conversation is still going on, albeit with much less style and respect for the language, is a measure of the truth of what Welles is saying. In other words, the jury is in. 'Content', as we say these days, is not in and of itself a trigger, lest it trigger those who are susceptible anyway. Add to that the inarguable fact that violent crime in the day that this was recorded was significantly higher than it is now.
"I think that they may encourage psychotics and homocidal and other dangerous types, but juvenile delinquency is a symptom of the illness of our age." What an amazingly insightful and loaded statement that is. He's not defending violence in films; in fact he immediately acknowledges that violent films encourage psychotics. What he is saying is that fictional violence doesn't turn good kids into bad ones. A good kid can differentiate between fictional and real violence, as anyone who grew up on the Stooges or Bugs Bunny can attest (I didn't go shoving my brother's head in a letter press, did you?). But to a psychotic individual, yes, violent films can exacerbate the situation. That's what child psychologists should be focusing on rather than whether Hitchcock, or the Road Runner, makes kids push each other off cliffs.
I will add to that children are born inherently evil by modern convention. If they are born natural survivers, they will exploit every institution and individual they can until they are stopped by force or mentally traumatised. "Goodness" is something we learn. It is the mark of good parental guidance. I stress that it is through his/her own personal experience that an individual grows up to become civilised. It can not be managed or controlled by others. Thus, whether films cause juvenile delinquency is a function of their _presentation_ and the viewers' receptiveness to it. Whether an individual is capable of making up their mind about good and bad according to those rules we've constructed, is what determines the outcome. And, fundamentally, only those two arguments: presentation and receptiveness determine the influence a multimedia well have on its audience. If you can not guarantee children to do not commit atrocities after having been presented a "good" media, shouldn't you assume the confounder is in their receptiveness to the message? Good education is the answer always, when people are concerned.
@@___xyz___ "I will add to that children are born inherently evil by modern convention. If they are born natural survivers, they will exploit every institution and individual they can until they are stopped by force or mentally traumatised." This is complete cynicism. If we are going to argue on evolutionary terms ("natural survivors"), then you'd find that cooperation is the most advantageous trait, not exploitation.
There is a subsidiary argument here though. Certain drugs are not (supposed to be) generally available because of the effect they have on some people - especially the vulnerable or the deranged. So, in most societies those substances are regulated and officially withheld to protect those people and society from the effects that their general availability might have. To encapsulate it in short, had there not been LSD (or whatever) available, the Manson clan would almost certainly never have done the horrific things they did. The same can be said of realistic violence in movies; I'm not talking about cartoon violence or non-graphic violence here - I'm talking about materials which glory in detailed violence or which feature stupidly long fight sequences. In real life most fights last maybe 30 seconds, in movies they can go on for 7-8 minutes. Because these things look real they can be likened to a drug which can affect the vulnerable mind. Any police officer will tell you that rapists and killers when they are arrested are almost certain to have a large stash of sexual or violent media at their home. In short, I don't think it's a simple matter of saying that kids and vulnerable minds are always able to differentiate movie fantasy from real life - cos it's manifestly not true in all cases. Censorship is not the answer either because - like with proscribing drugs - you just create a huge black market. I agree that education is perhaps the best tool we have to counter those effects.
There's a direct correlation between "gamers" and modern day "chuds." The games aren't making you violent. They're making you dumb with no life experience.
It's so fascinating that we've been having this same discussion for hundreds of years now. And all these fussy types who love to have something they dislike labled and branded as vulgar and evil. A scapegoat to blame all of societies ills on. Orson Wells is such an inspiration, and he's just speaking the truth here.
I remember there was a book on Welles composed mostly of interviews and in one of him he proposed that the theater was always an outlet - a release valve - for social tension. He said something like "if we don't allow fake blood on the stage [or screen], then we will start seeing real blood in our streets and homes."
Muuhwaaaagh the french... champagne.. hasalwaysbeencelebratedforitsexcellence .. There is a California champagne by Paul Masson, inspired by that same french excellence..
Orson Welles didn’t talk during an interview, He performed. To be honest, He didn’t talk at all...Ever. His dialogue, and His way of “talking” was so fascinating and eloquent it might as well of been performance art.
Just like the director in *The Other Side of the Wind*... Welles seems to find very few interviewers he can actually talk to, and not just play the part everyone wants to see.
That moment where the woman told him that children are quite imitative and that it could be a problem. He knew it. He honestly understood it and decided to stay the ambassador for film. In his later days he complains about filmakers being imitative about everyone copying things from film From people watching too many films. In his later days he became deeply disillusioned with movies and film. One wonders why.
I think that it's a great point that's made: it's not of question of the violence itself, but the use that it is put to, whether it is being used to make a statement about the human condition, or only as something to distract us from contemplating the human condition.
BBC has a full long interview Welles gave in the 50s. You should upload it, it's really interesting to listen to Orson, not only show it this section which is great.
What I find particularly striking, fascinating, and prescient is Welles's comment at 0:32: "Juvenile delinquency is I think a symptom of the illness of our age. It doesn't come from lack of playgrounds or bad comic books, but of a great longing for youth TO HAVE SOMETHING TO REBEL AGAINST" (my emphasis). I think Welles is making an exceedingly sophisticated point. I contend that one of the plausible reasons we find greater violence in our contemporary American society - and, particularly since Columbine, greater incidents of shootings among youth - is the subconscious perception among youth that there is no longer a way to rebel without being subjected to a co-opted form of that rebellion. Since the 1960s in this country, rebellion has MEANT something different; the lines between rebellion and conformity have become increasingly blurred. Most youth in our country today can rebel only within a context rather than rebelling AGAINST a context. It's tantamount to choosing a uniform, and if a youth is not SUFFICIENTLY rebellious, he or she is often ostracized from a group. This even has roots in 60s rebellion, as Frank Zappa brilliantly pointed out. If I'm reading Welles correctly - that ALL youth have a longing to rebel against something - then in my view their perspective that having the ability to do so through creativity of expression is becoming increasingly co-opted. Disturbingly, for some youth the consequent reaction is often violent. Then again, Welles does refer to the origin of juvenile delinquency as "the illness of our age," and in doing so it's admittedly unclear whether he feels that rebellion is that illness or another symptom of that illness.
I think the flaw in the Welles' theory is that we don't see equivalent behavior in other societies, even culturally close ones like Canada or Britain. Further, one can look at this desire to "rebel" as a sympton of an excessively comfortable spoilt generation.
I disagree that the 'desire to rebel' is a symptom of being excessively comfortable or "spoilt" in any way. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think the divide between the young and the old is fairly similar no matter which society you look at. This is why the pendulum effect exists: one generation comes to generally hold one set of beliefs, and the next reacts counter to that set of beliefs, and the next and the next. I would say however, I think with each swing of the pendulum some societies have become more and more liberal and safe; with the help of the renaissance and the success of the industrial revolution the Western world and many non-Western countries have become so prosperous and (usually) safe from attack that the youth has less and less to actively rebel against. The result is the kind of aimless rebellion of delinquents who want to feel like they have some control and they aren't just passing from cradle to grave in a static world. There is still plenty to rebel against and we do have the power to take control of our lives, but it's easy to feel like there isn't and you can't, so that's what I imagine is at the root of juvenile delinquency.
High testosterone and unbelievably high levels of psychoactive stimulants are also probably at least half to blame these days. I maintain that marketing confectionery or any kind of junk food to children should be banned- in Australia cigarettes can't even be advertised to adults, yet maccas, KFC and cereals made of nothing but sugar and coco are allowed to bait kids all day every day.
Leave it to Welles to be so rational and cool with his answer. During Shakespeare's time the stage would be covered with fake blood for Macbeth. And actually, the interviewer is mistaken, "virtue" almost always "triumphed" in the horror comics back in the 1950s, the "bad" character almost always came to a violent, ironically nasty ending. It's true, video games are blamed in the same way as horror comics were. Although, from my own humble experience, video games demand considerably more attention, cause a lot more stress, and ask for much more emotional and even physical involvement from the player than four color comics ever could. The computer screen affects our senses and brains in ways novels and comic books never have.
I agree to an extent. I myself have discovered horrifying aspects of my personality through playing games. However, that engrossment you describe could just as well be chalked up to a more successful piece of art then a play like Macbeth could ever be because instead of just passively watching a story, you are participating with it and actually living the emotions and feelings of the characters. And in that sense I fall right back into Orson's points.
But watching a good play of movie is never "passive" if you get emotionally involved in the action (like when I get tensed up watching a zombie film for example). You could say gaming induces a kind of "passivity" too. While the gamer is "active" when s/he plays, s/he is actually reacting to virtual stimuli constructed by designers in a game company, and so s/he is in a position of receiving and "passively" accepting the rules of the game simulation. I mean, why get upset when you "die" if it is only a simulation? "Raging" is evidence that a gamer has passively accepted the simulated situation so much that s/he is willing to shout and sometimes lose their temper in the "real" world because they "died" in the game. The gamer even shouts or screams at other people in the room, why? Because they "died" in some manufactured simulation? Depends on your definition of "active" too.
我操。If you want to be a slave to your simulations, go ahead, shit digitally. "You" are tapping out words to an "avatar" on "youtube" Goofy. "You" are reacting to pixellated insect "words" you idiot. The "gamer life" is so fucken significant. You "guys" practically run the world just shitting on you ashes fapping your controller. Oh my God, player "zonkie59032" just killed me! Ragewhaaaa! My diaper is so full! Nothing but a rifle. Pffft. Wow, that's hardcore. Really impressive. Eating canned beans in a microwave. Hardcore.
geinikan1kan thank you for losing the debate with that rant without any intelligent content or any rational counter arguments. Also learn to quotation mark
The same inane and illogical question gets raised and reraised in every generation, including the most current ones. Do tragic movies "glorify" grief and depression? Do holocaust movies "glorify" murdering Jews? No, because portraying something doesn't suddenly mean endorsing it. The same way, violent movies or games or art don't glorify murder. A crucial role of art and literature is to explore and reflect on all aspects of the individual and society. Shying away from meditating on the dark side only weakens our ability to wrestle with those corners.
Love the notion of an Elizabethan apprentice (they used to abscond in order to go to the theatre) coming out of The Globe, and attempting to do all the awful things you get in Shakespeare and Webster!
I love how they cleary gave Orson Welles a certain direction they wanted him to answer in, but he's having none of this nonsense. He wouldn't give them an inch.
Movie makers are storytellers. Orson once said that "The story teller's first duty is always to the story". As he instances here many classic stories feature violent acts. Those acts shape the direction of the story and narrative. IMO the problem we face now - and a whole lot more than when this discussion was had - is that (aided by the perfection of special effects and make up techniques) a lot of movie makers actively encourage their audiences to glory in the violence. In any story what matters in a fight or conflict is who prevails and to what extent they prevail. Stupidly elongating physical confrontations to 7-8 minutes and having the camera loving dwell on the physical details seems to me very unhealthy and is - again as Orson said - pandering to one of the very worst sides of human nature.
@@NostalgiNorden It was. Just look at all the news channels and politics today. One side screams "socialist commie scum!" And the other side screams "fascist nazi!"
Delinquency is a symptom of the larger problem of a society which refuses to meet the basic needs of its people. It is a known and proven fact that what we are told is "crime" is socio-economic at its core.
remember when this was done they are speaking of the old crypt comic like the crypt keeper. there was a rage of horror comic during this time and they were pushing for censor ship. this lead to the comic code. that why batman the adam west show was the way it was. the comic was writing that way. the comic code started eroding by the time it reach the 80's
Interviewer: "Virtue triumphs, but in the horror comics it doesn't." Wells: "Doesn't it?" Interviewer: "I don't think so. No, it doesn't." Wells:"Well, it doesn't in Edgar Alan Poe either."
David Chase said this best when he said something along the lines of "I don't make art for psychos. I make art for you and me. Rational good people. What a psychopath does with my art has nothing to do with me or my art."
It would be interesting to hear his thoughts on the hyper-realistic violent video games. I think it might change, but that might be me projecting a bit.
This reminds me, in a weird, but perhaps understandable way, of Frank Zappa's appearance in front of a Congressional hearing in the '90's, regarding violence in Rock/Pop/Rap lyrics. Welles is patiently, intellectually, outclassing his interviewers with elegant, eloquent Reason, and he may be the only American who could, simply by being himself, sound more "posh" than a roomful of Brits.
I thought of something very similar. Zappa appeared on the show "Crossfire" in the 80s and debated the same subject with the people from that show. He thoroughly outclassed them there also. I also think of a TV interview of Roger Waters and Syd Barrett in the 60s where the interviewer was so beyond out of touch and "intellectual" that he was, in fact, a fool, and the two Pink Floyd members brilliance was very above him.
Violence in film only works when it's creative and meaningful. I have tried to think of scenes where there is no violence but most scene's are always leading up to violence whether they are dark grotesque or even funny scenes like Indiana's Jones.
Good commentary on a good quote by Welles but saying ALL youths feel the need to rebel seems like a over reach. Of course, then you have to define what level of rebelling we're talking about. Is it a wholesome kid not willing to eat the peas, or a kid breaking running away from home.
We can only wish to go back to the days when juvenile delinquents were burning down society because they read "horror comics" where justice didn't prevail. Good grief. Now you only have to watch Fox News to see justice die slowly. ... I always wonder about these "violent art makes you violent" arguments. I was the most mild mannered child and student, and I read Stephen King voraciously, watched every R movie I was interested in watching. Never got into a fight. Never vandalized. Never crossed the law except for one speeding ticket 20 years ago. Why are not people like me evidence that violent art makes you a peaceful, well-rounded, intelligent, educated individual?
Unfortunately, you don't fit the narrative that people then and now spin when it comes to violence in media. The news(printed,televised and posted) like to throw this ridiculous notion that you become an evil git by watching violent films and readong horror comic books, watching violent television,playing violent video games, listening to heavy metal,rock,rap, everything that older people don't understand/likw, yet fail to recognize what this man undoubtedly knew, that violence doesn't effect children, but those who are of ill minds, easily influenced into believing their twisted thoughts are correct.
At this time in history, they are dead wrong about horror comics not being morality plays. The corpse always comes back and delivers justice to the murderer.
As much as things change, some things remain the same. Even today, people are still trying to blame horror films, and now video games, for violent behavior. In fact, studies show that entertainment, games included, often give people an outlet for their fears. Making it less likely that they will act out actions they see in movies and games in real life.
I wish Orson could witness the yellow journalism and least common denominator politics of the 21st century I think he would be disappointed that point of Citizen Kane is totally missed and forgotten on the modern generations, our roving mob of ne'er-do-wells.
Hamlet... everyone dies. Romeo and Juliet, both of them die and were involved basically in a gang war between two families. Yesterdays violent, irresponsible trash is tomorrows great work of art. And humanity will always have members who are violent and mentally disturbed. Has nothing to do with the art medium, simply the twisting of the human psyche through nature, nurture, and experience in life.
Youthful rebellion is simply reacting to being told how and what and where to be, to a person still himself and still wide open to possibilities. Movies, tv, mags (now internet) show them what is possible.
Not many can challenge the opinion of a "sophisticated" Englishmen and actually make any impact on them by the end of the conversation. At best they will disagree with you and at worst they will think you are simply an imbecile. In this case, however, Orson Welles was so incredibly well spoken what he was saying was actually getting across. You can almost tell after Welles pointed out Edgar Alan Poe as a literary example of stories where virtue doesn't always triumph in the end the interviewer had a brief expression of "Damn.. he's good" written on his face.
Here's the thing nobody ever talks about though; Violent movies/videogames might encourage kids to grow up to be doctors or lawyers or police officers or paramedics or filmmakers or special effects/make-up artists.
The interviewer questions whether virtue triumphs in horror comics - this isn't really the right question, but, even on those terms, those horror comics often showed a sense of poetic justice, w the bad behavior harshly punished - horror as a genre is often culturally conservative
Exactly; 20th century horror tended towards being morality plays. Even slasher films tended to have the teens who did 'immoral' things like having sex get killed whilst the final girl tended to be the good, pure soul. Horror comics were very much similar. What's interesting is that older horror stories, such as Poe and Lovecraft, didn't really fit into this structure. They were more about bad things happening to people regardless. But I guess the morality play idea is easier to sell to the public?
his diagnosis of why the youth get rowdy and violent is spot on, this is a man that remembers his own youth and how he felt back then, and has re-analyzed that confused period of his life now as an adult, in contrast the other older gentleman has lost all touch with his childhood self and seems to view the kids with a lack of empathy or understanding
!!!!!!!!!
Wonderful perspective sir. We must return again as children to where we came from; in order to return. ( Gates of Heaven)
Innocence
The people asserting that media is responsible for rebellious behavior in youth conveniently forget what it was like to be young and desiring to rebel against _something._ Its far easier to blame media than it is to admit shoddy parenting is the root cause of youth rebelliousness
@@andystegall7407 You're wrong. And nobody has forgotten anything from their youth. Media REINFORCES the WORST trying and self-destructive parts that - it is true - are a natural part of growing up. They throw gasoline on an already raging fire. And they do it for a quick buck.
Welles would have despaired profoundly if he had lived to see how Hollywood has CONTRIBUTED to the theft of our children's lives with its gratuitous violence and hyper-sexualized stories. A brilliant film like 'The Third Man' could not be made today because it wouldn't contain enough lurid sexual displays OR excessive violence.
That final line and the old man's reaction is just perfect
Orson is always ten steps ahead of everyone else.
Yes, Always!
Not ahead of death he wasn't, huh?
@@avinotion death isn't a being
@@avinotion What a stupid thing to say.
If he were, he would have added this, I submit: She asks of the "glorification" of violence and thus loads the question with a suspect assumption Orson and others often miss. The correct response is to say, "No, the movies show violence under various circumstances, as crimes, as self-defense, as revenge, and so on. What evidence do you have that it is thereby "glorified"? Look and see first, for it may be the exact opposite at times. Your question is flawed with a false assumption."
"... and it doesn't in Edgar Allen Poe does it?" Lol - the interviewers trying to take on Welles, then shot down.
They were just having a discussion.
no, they weren't having a discussion (Orson was). They were trying to take the piss out of the US.
Not that the US doesn't have issues, etc., but it's rather unseemly for one country to talk down about another country's culture. I'm not a fan when I see it in the US (ala Fox News, etc.), nor, in this case, by the Brits.
It's always nice to see pseudo intellectuals being taken down a notch or two by a real artist. As Welles said, Shakespeare didn't seem to incite juvenile delinquency and the pablum they were spewing was just so much bs.
Are you saying violence and the glorification of violence is an essential part of US culture? Lot less gun violence in UK.
TigerMeadows Violence is inherent in all human beings.
More inherent to some continents then others.
I need to watch more interviews with this man. His wisdom is distinct.
Classic Welles eyebrow scrunch, looking like he's patiently absorbing your question even though he's formulated an answer in the first two seconds.
I'm the same way. So are you.
Perfectly put
Genius
It’s like he’s thinking, “In the Depths of Your Ignorance!!!”
@@hydrogenroar But none of us have the subsequent monologue already completely written in our heads
And to think that the mainstream media is still pressing on the same issue nowadays... sad.
today it's about videogames.
Thata is it a GOP playbook or something?
The fact the Hillary Clinton tried to ban GTA San Andreas, no.
Don’t blame the mainstream media for it. They may fan the flames, yes, but this continued never ending crusade by each generation who thinks the younger one is worse than ever is very much conceived in the hearts of individuals. People have been perpetuating this myth long, long, LONG before there ever was a mass media.
@@emilytench lib-tards are only focused on wearing pink hats and trying to figure out if they are a boy or a girl.
Got a nice chuckle when he brought up Poe.
That last witty line is delivered in such a perfect tone
Welles had such a wonderful speaking voice
A genuinely interesting and genius of a man. The fact that the media and Hollywood torpedoed his career is a tragedy.
He torpedoed his own career by making films he wanted to make and not a lot of others were interested in.
which were still really interesting works @@lampad4549
what a brilliant man he was
I'd cut off a little finger to talk to him. The world, particularly USA needs someone like him.
notice how after listening to Orson Wells talk all the comments are written like a psudo-sophisticated playwright
it seems to be that way on almost any youtube interview clip of a well-spoken actor from a bygone era. it's really annoying, isn't it? all this bizarre posturing... i watched a marlon brando interview recently and nearly every damn comment was 'being an actor, i know personally what he's talking about. the interviewer is an idiot, he's brilliant. we act as a survival mechanism and blah blah blah..." what freaking assholes.
+chesterbesterfeild
Indubitably. Is it not a fact that TH-cam-molder of mass opinion though it is, or has become, is in every essence just a shameful ignominious mirror that which reflects not wanton eudaimonia, but rather our most prurient desires? That is to say, where are the boobies!
Orson, while extremely smart, is also a master of pseudo-sophistication though
@@beflygelt Who isn't?
You’re right, and there will always be people like that. But there are also people who genuinely like to think, and if there’s any lingering benefit to social media, it’s the potential to interact with them.
I guess kids are smart enough to be able to tell the difference between reality and fiction, even if some adults can't.
After the release of the 1986 movie Top Gun, the US Navy enlistment increased by 8 percent.
Military propaganda in film does cause people to join the military. I don’t think Texas chainsaw massacre causes any murders but when propaganda in film is intentional and well crafted it does work.
@@xant8344 Well in both cases you're just promoting inherent tendencies.
@@Palarci yeah just because it's inherent you don't have to promote anything
You may think that you can, but your subconscious definitely can’t. That goes for EVERYONE (including kids). Be aware of what you fill your mind up with, your mental consumption habits can tell you a lot on what you chose to focus on. . .
1:30 “When they are not works of art, they become shoddy and seem to be pandering.”
Modern movies in a nutshell.
"Movies don't create psychos." Movies make psychos, more creative!" (Billy Loomis "Scream" (1996)
And that is not a problem? Also, how does he know that? He is entitled to his opinion, of course, but how valid is it, and why?
@@mohammadtausifrafi8277 He is a fictional character
@@sylph8005 Thank you for the information, apparently people take the "opinions" of fictional characters seriously enough to quote them.
@@mohammadtausifrafi8277 You decide on the value of a statement on its own merit, not based on whether it comes from a fictional character or a real person.
@@gregh5061 That is your opinion, you are free to do that. Anyway, my initial question was regarding its merit.
The fact that the conversation is still going on, albeit with much less style and respect for the language, is a measure of the truth of what Welles is saying. In other words, the jury is in. 'Content', as we say these days, is not in and of itself a trigger, lest it trigger those who are susceptible anyway. Add to that the inarguable fact that violent crime in the day that this was recorded was significantly higher than it is now.
The man was majestic.
Love Orson Welles. Wish he was alive, l could meet this genius.
Same here, ive been a massive fan for years even though hes not of my generation
"I think that they may encourage psychotics and homocidal and other dangerous types, but juvenile delinquency is a symptom of the illness of our age."
What an amazingly insightful and loaded statement that is. He's not defending violence in films; in fact he immediately acknowledges that violent films encourage psychotics. What he is saying is that fictional violence doesn't turn good kids into bad ones. A good kid can differentiate between fictional and real violence, as anyone who grew up on the Stooges or Bugs Bunny can attest (I didn't go shoving my brother's head in a letter press, did you?). But to a psychotic individual, yes, violent films can exacerbate the situation. That's what child psychologists should be focusing on rather than whether Hitchcock, or the Road Runner, makes kids push each other off cliffs.
Excellent comment.
I will add to that children are born inherently evil by modern convention. If they are born natural survivers, they will exploit every institution and individual they can until they are stopped by force or mentally traumatised. "Goodness" is something we learn. It is the mark of good parental guidance. I stress that it is through his/her own personal experience that an individual grows up to become civilised. It can not be managed or controlled by others. Thus, whether films cause juvenile delinquency is a function of their _presentation_ and the viewers' receptiveness to it. Whether an individual is capable of making up their mind about good and bad according to those rules we've constructed, is what determines the outcome. And, fundamentally, only those two arguments: presentation and receptiveness determine the influence a multimedia well have on its audience. If you can not guarantee children to do not commit atrocities after having been presented a "good" media, shouldn't you assume the confounder is in their receptiveness to the message? Good education is the answer always, when people are concerned.
@@___xyz___ Interesting, Marie. I like your post. Do you have any reading to recommend? I want more haha.
@@___xyz___ "I will add to that children are born inherently evil by modern convention. If they are born natural survivers, they will exploit every institution and individual they can until they are stopped by force or mentally traumatised."
This is complete cynicism. If we are going to argue on evolutionary terms ("natural survivors"), then you'd find that cooperation is the most advantageous trait, not exploitation.
There is a subsidiary argument here though. Certain drugs are not (supposed to be) generally available because of the effect they have on some people - especially the vulnerable or the deranged. So, in most societies those substances are regulated and officially withheld to protect those people and society from the effects that their general availability might have. To encapsulate it in short, had there not been LSD (or whatever) available, the Manson clan would almost certainly never have done the horrific things they did.
The same can be said of realistic violence in movies; I'm not talking about cartoon violence or non-graphic violence here - I'm talking about materials which glory in detailed violence or which feature stupidly long fight sequences. In real life most fights last maybe 30 seconds, in movies they can go on for 7-8 minutes. Because these things look real they can be likened to a drug which can affect the vulnerable mind. Any police officer will tell you that rapists and killers when they are arrested are almost certain to have a large stash of sexual or violent media at their home.
In short, I don't think it's a simple matter of saying that kids and vulnerable minds are always able to differentiate movie fantasy from real life - cos it's manifestly not true in all cases. Censorship is not the answer either because - like with proscribing drugs - you just create a huge black market. I agree that education is perhaps the best tool we have to counter those effects.
What an intelligent man
The illness of our age...
Another great Orson clip. A great artist and genius. I feel such gratitude for what he gave us.
And this is going straight into my Favorites playlist.
I shall apply Orson Welles' logic of Horror Comics on to Video Games.
Fellow Neo-Gastonist?
There's a direct correlation between "gamers" and modern day "chuds." The games aren't making you violent. They're making you dumb with no life experience.
What a Legend Orson still is !! His Movies prove it !!
It's so fascinating that we've been having this same discussion for hundreds of years now. And all these fussy types who love to have something they dislike labled and branded as vulgar and evil. A scapegoat to blame all of societies ills on.
Orson Wells is such an inspiration, and he's just speaking the truth here.
"Well it doesn't in Edgar Allan Poe either..." a true genius 👏👏👏
I remember there was a book on Welles composed mostly of interviews and in one of him he proposed that the theater was always an outlet - a release valve - for social tension. He said something like "if we don't allow fake blood on the stage [or screen], then we will start seeing real blood in our streets and homes."
suddenly I have a craving for some frozen peas and fish sticks
Muuhwaaaagh the french... champagne.. hasalwaysbeencelebratedforitsexcellence ..
There is a California champagne by Paul Masson, inspired by that same french excellence..
I've had a craving for country goodness and green pea-ness.
AHHHHHHHH could I have a glass of champagne with them?
We'll never sell a wine before its time
Mm, they're even better raw!
"Well it doesn't in Edgar Allan Poe either you know?"
ouuuuchhhhhhh, i felt that.
Orson Welles didn’t talk during an interview, He performed. To be honest, He didn’t talk at all...Ever. His dialogue, and His way of “talking” was so fascinating and eloquent it might as well of been performance art.
Just like the director in *The Other Side of the Wind*... Welles seems to find very few interviewers he can actually talk to, and not just play the part everyone wants to see.
That moment where the woman told him that children are quite imitative and that it could be a problem.
He knew it.
He honestly understood it and decided to stay the ambassador for film.
In his later days he complains about filmakers being imitative about everyone copying things from film
From people watching too many films.
In his later days he became deeply disillusioned with movies and film. One wonders why.
I think that it's a great point that's made: it's not of question of the violence itself, but the use that it is put to, whether it is being used to make a statement about the human condition, or only as something to distract us from contemplating the human condition.
A man of pure class, brilliant person. 🎥🎬
BBC has a full long interview Welles gave in the 50s. You should upload it, it's really interesting to listen to Orson, not only show it this section which is great.
Great words of a great man
What I find particularly striking, fascinating, and prescient is Welles's comment at 0:32: "Juvenile delinquency is I think a symptom of the illness of our age. It doesn't come from lack of playgrounds or bad comic books, but of a great longing for youth TO HAVE SOMETHING TO REBEL AGAINST" (my emphasis).
I think Welles is making an exceedingly sophisticated point. I contend that one of the plausible reasons we find greater violence in our contemporary American society - and, particularly since Columbine, greater incidents of shootings among youth - is the subconscious perception among youth that there is no longer a way to rebel without being subjected to a co-opted form of that rebellion. Since the 1960s in this country, rebellion has MEANT something different; the lines between rebellion and conformity have become increasingly blurred. Most youth in our country today can rebel only within a context rather than rebelling AGAINST a context. It's tantamount to choosing a uniform, and if a youth is not SUFFICIENTLY rebellious, he or she is often ostracized from a group.
This even has roots in 60s rebellion, as Frank Zappa brilliantly pointed out. If I'm reading Welles correctly - that ALL youth have a longing to rebel against something - then in my view their perspective that having the ability to do so through creativity of expression is becoming increasingly co-opted. Disturbingly, for some youth the consequent reaction is often violent.
Then again, Welles does refer to the origin of juvenile delinquency as "the illness of our age," and in doing so it's admittedly unclear whether he feels that rebellion is that illness or another symptom of that illness.
I think the flaw in the Welles' theory is that we don't see equivalent behavior in other societies, even culturally close ones like Canada or Britain.
Further, one can look at this desire to "rebel" as a sympton of an excessively comfortable spoilt generation.
Good point. By extension, I wonder the extent to which this rebellion is reducible to testosterone.
I disagree that the 'desire to rebel' is a symptom of being excessively comfortable or "spoilt" in any way. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think the divide between the young and the old is fairly similar no matter which society you look at. This is why the pendulum effect exists: one generation comes to generally hold one set of beliefs, and the next reacts counter to that set of beliefs, and the next and the next.
I would say however, I think with each swing of the pendulum some societies have become more and more liberal and safe; with the help of the renaissance and the success of the industrial revolution the Western world and many non-Western countries have become so prosperous and (usually) safe from attack that the youth has less and less to actively rebel against. The result is the kind of aimless rebellion of delinquents who want to feel like they have some control and they aren't just passing from cradle to grave in a static world.
There is still plenty to rebel against and we do have the power to take control of our lives, but it's easy to feel like there isn't and you can't, so that's what I imagine is at the root of juvenile delinquency.
High testosterone and unbelievably high levels of psychoactive stimulants are also probably at least half to blame these days. I maintain that marketing confectionery or any kind of junk food to children should be banned- in Australia cigarettes can't even be advertised to adults, yet maccas, KFC and cereals made of nothing but sugar and coco are allowed to bait kids all day every day.
It can't be high testosterone, Sonofa. Young men today have less testosterone than men of the same age a hundred years ago.
"It doesn't in Edgar Allen Poe either, you know."
You cannot play darts when the opponent has a crossbow.
Weird you got the French Revolution (profoundly violent) without tv and movies to blame.
It feels like the interviewers really want orson to say that the modern films do contribute to violent kids, and orson just speaks his mind
Leave it to Welles to be so rational and cool with his answer. During Shakespeare's time the stage would be covered with fake blood for Macbeth. And actually, the interviewer is mistaken, "virtue" almost always "triumphed" in the horror comics back in the 1950s, the "bad" character almost always came to a violent, ironically nasty ending. It's true, video games are blamed in the same way as horror comics were. Although, from my own humble experience, video games demand considerably more attention, cause a lot more stress, and ask for much more emotional and even physical involvement from the player than four color comics ever could. The computer screen affects our senses and brains in ways novels and comic books never have.
I agree to an extent. I myself have discovered horrifying aspects of my personality through playing games. However, that engrossment you describe could just as well be chalked up to a more successful piece of art then a play like Macbeth could ever be because instead of just passively watching a story, you are participating with it and actually living the emotions and feelings of the characters. And in that sense I fall right back into Orson's points.
But watching a good play of movie is never "passive" if you get emotionally involved in the action (like when I get tensed up watching a zombie film for example). You could say gaming induces a kind of "passivity" too. While the gamer is "active" when s/he plays, s/he is actually reacting to virtual stimuli constructed by designers in a game company, and so s/he is in a position of receiving and "passively" accepting the rules of the game simulation. I mean, why get upset when you "die" if it is only a simulation? "Raging" is evidence that a gamer has passively accepted the simulated situation so much that s/he is willing to shout and sometimes lose their temper in the "real" world because they "died" in the game. The gamer even shouts or screams at other people in the room, why? Because they "died" in some manufactured simulation? Depends on your definition of "active" too.
我操。If you want to be a slave to your simulations, go ahead, shit digitally. "You" are tapping out words to an "avatar" on "youtube" Goofy. "You" are reacting to pixellated insect "words" you idiot. The "gamer life" is so fucken significant. You "guys" practically run the world just shitting on you ashes fapping your controller. Oh my God, player "zonkie59032" just killed me! Ragewhaaaa! My diaper is so full! Nothing but a rifle. Pffft. Wow, that's hardcore. Really impressive. Eating canned beans in a microwave. Hardcore.
geinikan1kan
thank you for losing the debate with that rant without any intelligent content or any rational counter arguments. Also learn to quotation mark
"I'll" "try" "my" "best," "thanks" for "letting" me "know" your "comment" is very much "appreciated" Mr. "Field."
The same inane and illogical question gets raised and reraised in every generation, including the most current ones. Do tragic movies "glorify" grief and depression? Do holocaust movies "glorify" murdering Jews? No, because portraying something doesn't suddenly mean endorsing it. The same way, violent movies or games or art don't glorify murder. A crucial role of art and literature is to explore and reflect on all aspects of the individual and society. Shying away from meditating on the dark side only weakens our ability to wrestle with those corners.
Reality is horror. And in reality, "good" often does not "triumph".
He's right. They are wrong.
Love the notion of an Elizabethan apprentice (they used to abscond in order to go to the theatre) coming out of The Globe, and attempting to do all the awful things you get in Shakespeare and Webster!
I love how they cleary gave Orson Welles a certain direction they wanted him to answer in, but he's having none of this nonsense. He wouldn't give them an inch.
"Virtue triumphs". Please somebody hand him a script of Hamlet.
Movie makers are storytellers. Orson once said that "The story teller's first duty is always to the story". As he instances here many classic stories feature violent acts. Those acts shape the direction of the story and narrative. IMO the problem we face now - and a whole lot more than when this discussion was had - is that (aided by the perfection of special effects and make up techniques) a lot of movie makers actively encourage their audiences to glory in the violence. In any story what matters in a fight or conflict is who prevails and to what extent they prevail. Stupidly elongating physical confrontations to 7-8 minutes and having the camera loving dwell on the physical details seems to me very unhealthy and is - again as Orson said - pandering to one of the very worst sides of human nature.
I would say the mid-50's, and the comics are perhaps the famous EC titles (Tales from the Crypt, etc.).
Thanks bbc for letting me know when this is
One of the few people, ever that deserves to be called genius.
How strange people with different opinions talking rationally, boy times have changed.
+Norgamka And yet even here you can hear the faint traces of the downward spiral debating was to go through.
"Finds one clip where people talk rationally"
OMG it was so much different back then!!!!
@@NostalgiNorden It was. Just look at all the news channels and politics today. One side screams "socialist commie scum!" And the other side screams "fascist nazi!"
One finds is ironic that the British deplore violence in film, even though they visited it on many others around the world for centuries.
That last comment was brilliant
Art doesn’t cause, it reveals.
Oooh thats a really good one
Amazing how long this nonsense argument has persisted and just refuses to die. Same today as it was 60 years ago.
Classy intellect.
They never should have banned smoking on television. Always creates a good conversation and discussion.
Orson Welles is the man.
Those interviewers were so pathetically outclassed by Welles. Quite humorous.
Delinquency is a symptom of the larger problem of a society which refuses to meet the basic needs of its people. It is a known and proven fact that what we are told is "crime" is socio-economic at its core.
When they talk about "horror comics" do they mean the EC Comics? Or the Hammer and Roger Corman horror movies?
Probably both.
remember when this was done they are speaking of the old crypt comic like the crypt keeper. there was a rage of horror comic during this time and they were pushing for censor ship. this lead to the comic code. that why batman the adam west show was the way it was. the comic was writing that way. the comic code started eroding by the time it reach the 80's
He had a great voice for narrating documentaries & stuff.
Interviewer: "Virtue triumphs, but in the horror comics it doesn't."
Wells: "Doesn't it?"
Interviewer: "I don't think so. No, it doesn't."
Wells:"Well, it doesn't in Edgar Alan Poe either."
David Chase said this best when he said something along the lines of "I don't make art for psychos. I make art for you and me. Rational good people. What a psychopath does with my art has nothing to do with me or my art."
Blaming popular media like movies, books and games for violence is a scapegoat for horrible parenting.
Interesting man.. articulate and in command of what he saying
no pressure- Logic
Thanks for posting. What year's this from?
I like how the reporters kept trying to steer Orson to the direction they wanted and he wasn't having any of it.
Violence can be within who watch the movie, not in the movie
In early times they killed each other with swords, cut off their heads....and they are complaining about a horror movie being violent, really?
Gratuitous violence is easy. Portraying socially constructive behavior in books, plays and film is hard to do without it becoming boring.
that's because it is boring
Wonder what they would think of the violence depicted in cinema today?
One thing that contributed to juvenile delinquency during this post-World War II era was the absence of fathers in the home.
Social critics have never learned.
It would be interesting to hear his thoughts on the hyper-realistic violent video games. I think it might change, but that might be me projecting a bit.
This reminds me, in a weird, but perhaps understandable way, of Frank Zappa's appearance in front of a Congressional hearing in the '90's, regarding violence in Rock/Pop/Rap lyrics.
Welles is patiently, intellectually, outclassing his interviewers with elegant, eloquent Reason, and he may be the only American who could, simply by being himself, sound more "posh" than a roomful of Brits.
I thought of something very similar. Zappa appeared on the show "Crossfire" in the 80s and debated the same subject with the people from that show. He thoroughly outclassed them there also. I also think of a TV interview of Roger Waters and Syd Barrett in the 60s where the interviewer was so beyond out of touch and "intellectual" that he was, in fact, a fool, and the two Pink Floyd members brilliance was very above him.
Reminds me of Marilyn Manson getting interviewed about violence in art.
Violence in film only works when it's creative and meaningful. I have tried to think of scenes where there is no violence but most scene's are always leading up to violence whether they are dark grotesque or even funny scenes like Indiana's Jones.
Good commentary on a good quote by Welles but saying ALL youths feel the need to rebel seems like a over reach.
Of course, then you have to define what level of rebelling we're talking about. Is it a wholesome kid not willing to eat the peas, or a kid breaking running away from home.
We can only wish to go back to the days when juvenile delinquents were burning down society because they read "horror comics" where justice didn't prevail. Good grief. Now you only have to watch Fox News to see justice die slowly.
...
I always wonder about these "violent art makes you violent" arguments. I was the most mild mannered child and student, and I read Stephen King voraciously, watched every R movie I was interested in watching. Never got into a fight. Never vandalized. Never crossed the law except for one speeding ticket 20 years ago. Why are not people like me evidence that violent art makes you a peaceful, well-rounded, intelligent, educated individual?
Unfortunately, you don't fit the narrative that people then and now spin when it comes to violence in media. The news(printed,televised and posted) like to throw this ridiculous notion that you become an evil git by watching violent films and readong horror comic books, watching violent television,playing violent video games, listening to heavy metal,rock,rap, everything that older people don't understand/likw, yet fail to recognize what this man undoubtedly knew, that violence doesn't effect children, but those who are of ill minds, easily influenced into believing their twisted thoughts are correct.
Damn, we’ve been having the same conversation about violence in media forever
At this time in history, they are dead wrong about horror comics not being morality plays. The corpse always comes back and delivers justice to the murderer.
As much as things change, some things remain the same. Even today, people are still trying to blame horror films, and now video games, for violent behavior. In fact, studies show that entertainment, games included, often give people an outlet for their fears. Making it less likely that they will act out actions they see in movies and games in real life.
I wish Orson could witness the yellow journalism and least common denominator politics of the 21st century I think he would be disappointed that point of Citizen Kane is totally missed and forgotten on the modern generations, our roving mob of ne'er-do-wells.
Welles was wise. 🎵👌🎬💚
Hamlet... everyone dies. Romeo and Juliet, both of them die and were involved basically in a gang war between two families. Yesterdays violent, irresponsible trash is tomorrows great work of art. And humanity will always have members who are violent and mentally disturbed. Has nothing to do with the art medium, simply the twisting of the human psyche through nature, nurture, and experience in life.
Good god…the depressing thing is people are still debating filmmakers about this crap…
Youthful rebellion is simply reacting to being told how and what and where to be, to a person still himself and still wide open to possibilities. Movies, tv, mags (now internet) show them what is possible.
The society of Shakespeare was quite violent
Not many can challenge the opinion of a "sophisticated" Englishmen and actually make any impact on them by the end of the conversation. At best they will disagree with you and at worst they will think you are simply an imbecile. In this case, however, Orson Welles was so incredibly well spoken what he was saying was actually getting across. You can almost tell after Welles pointed out Edgar Alan Poe as a literary example of stories where virtue doesn't always triumph in the end the interviewer had a brief expression of "Damn.. he's good" written on his face.
I personally think violence comes from the colors on the screen. Look how chill those people were in black and white.
When did this interview take place?
How is it difficult to find what year was this video made?
It's not a contest to see who expressed the ideas first. Nobody's copying anyone. Both men expressed similar ideas. That's all the guy was observing.
Here's the thing nobody ever talks about though;
Violent movies/videogames might encourage kids to grow up to be doctors or lawyers or police officers or paramedics or filmmakers or special effects/make-up artists.
The interviewer questions whether virtue triumphs in horror comics - this isn't really the right question, but, even on those terms, those horror comics often showed a sense of poetic justice, w the bad behavior harshly punished - horror as a genre is often culturally conservative
Exactly; 20th century horror tended towards being morality plays. Even slasher films tended to have the teens who did 'immoral' things like having sex get killed whilst the final girl tended to be the good, pure soul. Horror comics were very much similar. What's interesting is that older horror stories, such as Poe and Lovecraft, didn't really fit into this structure. They were more about bad things happening to people regardless. But I guess the morality play idea is easier to sell to the public?