I agree. Well said.
As far as sexual and violent stimulus:
The accessibility of the internet has introduced every young person to every kind of porn and violence imaginable. While being caught watching a VCR tape for me at 13 was met by my parents saying "Do you have any questions?", today's parents have a much bigger challenge, even the ones that are trying really hard to monitor their children.
With film violence becoming more and more stylized (I am not preaching, I watch it too), a film like A Clockwork Orange is no longer THAT shocking, because you can see torture porn or a Rodriguez, Tarantino or Guy Ritchie film that makes death and the act of killing look "cool". Where movies used to concentrate on great plots and contained violence, many newer films contain violence and are shorter on plot, making the violence itself a main character and driving force of the film (torture porn comes to mind). There has always been pulp film, but now, many more films fall into that category. We are very far removed from plot heavy films like The Usual Suspects, and we are seeing many more films like 300. Again, I am not preaching, but the art of film is now reserved for special effects more than the more subtle mechanisms that make film great, you know, like that Hitchcock fellow. He was pretty good.
That's my two cents, anyway.
"In our wings that bark, flashing teeth of brass, standing tall in the dark" - David Bowie
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