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Atta Girl, give em hell Tulsi!
#11
FYI -Not surprisingly, "saveourchildren" is a QAnon hashtag. If you search for it on twitter, the posts that come up are from those following the conspiracy group QAnon. It's no wonder there's so much noise about this.

Anyway, I watched this movie last night. It wasn't terrible. And it wasn't great. It's hard to miss the struggle being portrayed. The central character's rebellion against one culture that would have her married (as early as a child) to a man who could take another wife is understandable. She witnessed her mother suffer in tears. Or she could shock them all and become what she thinks she sees on TV, instagram, etc, an independent, strong, hypersexualized woman who is in control of her destiny. 

Yes, there are consequences shown. That outdoor dance scene is obviously meant to make the viewer uncomfortable. You can see the people in the audience turning their heads, covering the eyes of the kids in the crowd and giving thumbs down. I was certainly uncomfortable watching it. I get the film maker's point. I do wish they'd not gone with the tight close-up shots as the message could have been delivered without them. But one could also argue that it accomplished its goal by making the viewer recoil in disgust. Most importantly, you can see the change in the main character who chooses to be a child instead of whatever path she was on.

The message of the movie is good. I see no issue with it being available. 
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#12
The marketing for the movie in the United States was inappropriate. That is a huge part of the problem. The picture was unacceptable but didn't represent the movie. And then there are the batshit QAon conspiracy theorists trying to muddy the waters. If anything it was more noise without any action. The message of the movie is important but that got lost in the exploitation by Netflix. I would agree that the movie was good not great. Netflix if anything hurt the movie for an attention grab.
https://twitter.com/netflix/status/12964...53057?s=20


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#13
Yeah cuz crotch shots of children is just part of the story. 

This is all noise about nothing, an empty conspiracy...  major eye roll.  Defend this shit if you want, but that pic MBlack posted is disgusting. 

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#14
^ Pretty sure we all agree that its disgusting...
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#15
No one is defending those pictures. The French poster is distinctly different than the American poster. Netflix fucked up on that big time. 
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#16
Quote: @Vikergirl said:
[Image: twitter-reaction.jpg?w=596?w=650]The posters give different messages. One gives a different message of what the film is actually about and the other one is not about grabbing attention in a negative way. The American poster is very damaging to the message. It distracts and takes away from the issue at hand. It has a different connotation. The French poster is more in line with the actual movie. It is not trying to be overt or inappropriate. If you look at the two posters, you would think they are representing two different movies.
The controversy reminds me of Bill O'Reilly. Every night dude would have a segment on teenage promiscuity of some sort, giving them YET another opportunity to use the "high school girls in short skirts walking the halls" B-roll. 
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#17
Nobody isn't saying the Netflix poster isn't disgusting. Its been said numerous times. I'm going to leave this here from Sasha Cohen about social media and Facebook specifically. It is the biggest propaganda machine in history:


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#18
it isn't just the poster.  The movie is worse.  that image mblack posted shows clips from the movie.  disgusting.  And gotta love the hypocrisy of those defending child porn.  Guess it isn't surprising that the empty porn leads to worse.
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#19
Quote: @greediron said:
it isn't just the poster.  The movie is worse.  that image mblack posted shows clips from the movie.  disgusting.  And gotta love the hypocrisy of those defending child porn.  Guess it isn't surprising that the empty porn leads to worse.
The movie documents the sexualization of children in order to make a point against it. It's no different than any number of movies portraying extreme drug use or violence in order to make a point against it. 

It's obvious that some mothers see their children as extensions of themselves...and perhaps their own lost sexual appeal. We're all proud of our children, whether they're playing baseball or excelling in some academic achievement. We see them as extensions of ourselves. Now, obviously, baseball and school are healthy, harmless activities. These mothers are doing the same thing, but through harmful, potentially dangerous activities. 

After this movie, maybe parents will think twice about allowing their kids to participate in things like this. 
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#20
Any one remember Honey Boo Boo or Little Miss Sunshine?  Anything to proclaim self righteousness, must be low self esteem to use something like this.    

It was blown marketing by Netflix, some one should be fired, but hardly promoting underage objectification to titillate perverts.
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