Judging a film

Mark Moring, from christianitytoday.com, recently interviewed director Richard Dutcher about his films, focusing on how his background in the Mormon community affects his work. Dutcher made a comment I found interesting about how the Mormon community judges films (change Mormon to Evangelical and it still holds true):

“I think most Mormon films are expressions of “the Mormon aesthetic,” and have very little to do with anything at the heart of Mormonism. I mean they’re really not about doctrine or history; there’s really no thought put into it. It’s just simply a trifle, a piece of entertainment, something that won’t offend.

The Mormon community, by and large, judges their films based on what’s not in them—if there’s no nudity, no violence, and no harsh language, then it must be a good film. I try to point out the lack of logic to that, where we should be judging film based on what IS in it—good acting, story, craft, some thought, some theme. But I think most of the cinematic expressions coming out of the Mormon community are just, “Let’s not offend. Let’s do something the preacher won’t get mad about,” rather than telling the stories that have to be told, and exploring the territory that has to be explored.”

You can read the full interview here.

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