{"id":224,"date":"2026-06-06T09:41:44","date_gmt":"2026-06-06T09:41:44","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/atlaslivingmedia.com\/?p=224"},"modified":"2026-06-06T09:41:44","modified_gmt":"2026-06-06T09:41:44","slug":"how-much-on-screen-violence-is-too-much","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/atlaslivingmedia.com\/?p=224","title":{"rendered":"How Much On-Screen Violence Is Too Much?"},"content":{"rendered":"<article>\n<p>When the clock struck midnight on May 1, the far-right conspiracy website <em>Infowars<\/em> went offline with a whimper. The organization was dissolved after multiple successful defamation lawsuits were filed against its founder, Alex Jones, and eventually no one could pay the $81,000-per-month rent for the website\u2019s studio space. Jones owes more than a billion dollars after he spent years claiming that the deadliest K-12 shooting in history was a hoax perpetrated by the government to promote the passage of strict gun-control laws. The victims\u2019 families were subjected to relentless harassment and death threats by Jones\u2019s followers, who believed that they and their dead children were \u201ccrisis actors.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/atlaslivingmedia.com\/?p=222\">Requiem for the American Empire<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Neither my blood pressure nor my sanity can countenance the conspiracy theories that hucksters like Jones peddle as if they were dietary supplements or survivalist supplies. But as much as the Sandy Hook truthers are blinded by hateful ideology, I have to believe some of their fervor stems from how bewildering that particular tragedy was. School shootings are as endemic to 21st-century America as the common cold: Roughly 233 of them occurred last year, though that number isn\u2019t definitive, since there is no standard definition of the term \u201cschool shooting.\u201d But even taking into account our acquiescent gun culture and the current adolescent mental health crisis, the mere idea that someone would shoot 20 6- and 7-year-olds with a legally purchased semiautomatic rifle can short-circuit even the stablest of minds.<\/p>\n<p>I have been prone to depression for most of my life, and I have managed it, sometimes more successfully than others, with self-medication and irregular emotional support. Hence, my depressive periods tend to blend together in my memory. (Frankly, they aren\u2019t severe or notable enough to be worth remembering at all.) But the months following Sandy Hook were a different story. The shooting happened at the tail end of finals during my sophomore year of college. I had plenty of time to absorb, and be affected by, the tributes and debates that took place throughout the winter break and the subsequent spring semester.<\/p>\n<p>I felt vaguely embarrassed by how affected I was and brushed off queries from my friends about my low mood. I had no personal connection to anyone who was killed. I didn\u2019t even have younger siblings whom I could project my secondhand grief onto. I suppose part of the reason I was so unnerved by the whole affair was that I knew in my heart that nothing would change, culturally or politically, in its aftermath. Sure enough, those forebodings were confirmed when numerous states passed laws that <em>weakened<\/em> gun restrictions in the months after the shooting. If 20 dead kids weren\u2019t enough to alter the terms of the gun-control debate in this country, then the debate was over.<\/p>\n<p>My distance from the incident could not heal my raw nerves. I remember my mother offhandedly mentioning that, since it was two weeks before Christmas, the victims\u2019 parents almost certainly had presents for their kids already stashed away in their homes. The heartbreaking banality of that statement undid me like a zipper.<\/p>\n<p>The first time I was first paid for my writing was in my junior year of college when I reviewed a David Spade standup-comedy special for <em>The A.V. Club<\/em>. It would be another few years before I could call myself a film critic. I settled instead for developing an inchoate cinephilia.<\/p>\n<p>Like most burgeoning cineastes, I embraced a permissive attitude toward on-screen violence as an outgrowth of a generally progressive view of art. But even as a young man, I found it distressing to watch depictions of children getting gunned down to manufacture drama. I remember barely being able to stomach <em>Battle Royale <\/em>(2000), a pre\u2013<em>Hunger Games <\/em>dystopian action film about junior-high-school kids who are forced to fight one another to the death by their authoritarian government, when my college roommates screened it in our apartment. Years later, I was asked to review Paul Greengrass\u2019s <em>22 July <\/em>(2018), a docudrama about the 2011 domestic terrorist attacks in Norway, and I distinctly remember thinking that the film offered nothing substantial enough to justify its graphic recreation of those brutal events. I have similar difficulties with films I otherwise adore, like John Carpenter\u2019s <em>Assault on Precinct 13 <\/em>(1976), in which an unproductively sour taste floods my mouth when a gunman\u2019s bullet blasts through a little girl\u2019s vanilla ice cream and into her chest, leaving her covered in blood.<\/p>\n<p>My fragility around this issue has compounded in recent years as contemporary cinema reflects the normalization of wholesale slaughter as a hazard of American life. <em>Vox Lux <\/em>(2018), for example, capitalizes on the trauma of mass shootings to lend sociocultural heft to a rudimentary exploration of contemporary celebrity. The weakest shot in <em>Weapons<\/em> (2025), a supernatural-horror film about 17 children who mysteriously disappear, features a nightmarish image of an assault rifle eerily floating in the sky, cheaply summoning a tangible source of terror as a vehicle for narrative ambiguity. The specious evocation of real-life carnage has become something of a cinematic red line for me, admittedly complicating my otherwise open-minded philosophy regarding artistic depictions of aberrance.<\/p>\n<p>My oft-frustrating sensitivity to cinematic depictions of mass gun violence came to mind as I watched <em>The Drama <\/em>(2026), Kristoffer Borgli\u2019s new commercially successful (and critically divisive) dark romantic comedy. The film chronicles the repercussions of a woman\u2019s revelation to her fianc\u00e9 and friends that she had planned, but didn\u2019t carry out, a school shooting when she was a teenager. The hesitant confession of the bride-to-be, Emma (Zendaya), occurs in mixed company\u2014Emma\u2019s maid of honor responds negatively to the admission because her cousin had been paralyzed in a shooting\u2014days before her wedding to Charlie (Robert Pattinson). The final preparations for the nuptials become shrouded in unease and regret, with Charlie haunted by nightmarish images of mass death and the film\u2019s soundtrack peppered with allusions to gunshots and screams of terror.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/atlaslivingmedia.com\/?p=220\">Why Are Children Working in American Tobacco Fields?<\/a><\/p>\n<p>A crucial portion of <em>The Drama <\/em>follows a high-school-aged Emma, played by young actress Jordyn Curet, whom we see in a series of flashbacks being pushed into nihilism by her peers\u2019 overt bullying. Obsessed with mass-shooter iconography and online gun-violence forums, Emma simmers with rage until an attack on her school, with specific people in mind to eliminate, feels like her only option. She even records a video manifesto to be discovered after her suicide, but it ultimately gets scuttled by a software update that crashes her computer.<\/p>\n<p>In <em>The Drama<\/em>, Borgli, a Norwegian director, highlights American gun culture and mental illness and the ways they impact an impressionable child with a matter-of-fact sensibility. He doesn\u2019t treat the teenage Emma as a vehicle for alarmist social commentary or moral instruction about \u201ckids today,\u201d but rather as a developing person whose future isn\u2019t set in stone. Borgli emphasizes the ways that quasi-comical coincidences, like the unexpected computer failure, can push the Emmas of the world off a seemingly inexorable negative path. Case in point: She decides to call off the assault only after a mass shooting at a mall happens to take place on the day she was supposed to mount her own\u2014its own comment on the unfathomable prevalence of such events.<\/p>\n<p>In the aftermath of that attack, which costs the life of a classmate of hers, Emma feels confused and overwhelmed by the outpouring of grief from the very people she had previously scorned. After a peer encourages her to join a new coalition against gun violence, she quickly makes friends in the club, and later becomes an outspoken activist. Fortuitous events and the compassion of her fellow students ultimately shock Emma into a position of empathy, all while she lives with a reminder of her capacity for destruction: her partial deafness, the product of incorrectly practice-firing her dad\u2019s rifle in the woods.<\/p>\n<p>I\u2019ll admit that as I\u2019ve aged, I\u2019ve become even more sensitive to on-screen gun violence in general, regardless of whether it\u2019s inflicted on adults or on children. Sometimes this discomfort can be productive, like with Alan Clarke\u2019s landmark short film <em>Elephant <\/em>(1989), which coldly depicts 18 murders to highlight the social forces that gave rise to sectarian bloodshed in Northern Ireland during the Troubles. Other times, I am merely disgusted, like when I saw the other <em>Elephant <\/em>(2003), Gus Van Sant\u2019s film about a school shooting inspired by the Columbine massacre that uses minimalist formal techniques comparable to those in Clarke\u2019s film but to dehumanizing and politically disorganized ends.<\/p>\n<p>While I knew what the big reveal was in <em>The Drama<\/em> before I saw it, I was disarmed by Borgli\u2019s palpably sensitive portrayal of (failed) mass-shooter psychology and his convincing depiction of intervention. \u201cViolence\u2014whether directed outward or inward\u201a is rarely spontaneous. It is almost always preceded by signals that, in hindsight, feel painfully clear,\u201d wrote Nicole Hockley, the mother of a child killed in the Sandy Hook massacre, arguing that Borgli accurately portrays troubling adolescent behavioral patterns that parents and educators routinely ignore.<\/p>\n<p>The main preoccupation of <em>The Drama<\/em> is the psychological effects of the modern panopticon. Much of the film\u2019s comedy involves Charlie\u2019s splenetic paranoia about how others would perceive him and his relationship if they were to discover Emma\u2019s \u201cviolent\u201d past. Yet neither the film\u2019s mild satire of American cultural sensitivities and liberal outrage nor its humorously eye-rolling attitude toward Charlie\u2019s less-than-enlightened attitude undercuts its sincere depiction of a troubled child who is pulled from the brink of horror at the last second. In fact, the film\u2019s anxious comedy renders its portrayal of Emma\u2019s youth, and her forced reckoning as a conscience-stricken adult, all the more earnest in contrast.<\/p>\n<p>Some critics have argued that Borgli opportunistically uses the widespread danger of school shootings to construct Emma\u2019s characterization. (The film\u2019s marketing campaign, which treats Emma\u2019s secret as a \u201csurprising\u201d third-act twist for audiences to discover together, doesn\u2019t help matters.) Theoretically, I should concur with this criticism, but Borgli\u2019s mixture of sympathy and concern for Emma\u2019s rage, ably brought to life by Curet, felt appropriately considered in my eyes. <em>The Drama<\/em> also doesn\u2019t approach Emma\u2019s disclosure lightly. To learn that a loved one was capable of such violence, even if she didn\u2019t follow through with it, does indeed alter one\u2019s perceptions. Borgli may use these ideas as a springboard for dark comedy, but he doesn\u2019t present them with a smirking insincerity.<\/p>\n<p>Borgli\u2019s unsentimental view of American violence\u2014its social foundation and the desensitized public discourse around it, especially\u2014rang true to me as someone who, like many others, has witnessed the splintering of society. But as much as <em>The Drama <\/em>takes America\u2019s alienated population and their reflexive love for destructive action as a given, it also exhibits a staunch belief in the capacity for human beings to change. Such muted optimism about people and reform can only arise from a hard-earned fatalism about our intractable culture. In a way, it\u2019s the most my own worldview has been reflected on screen in some time.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/atlaslivingmedia.com\/?p=213\">Graham Platner and the Rise of White-Male Identity Politics<\/a><\/p>\n<\/article>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The Nation Magazine<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":223,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[9],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-224","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-the-weekend-read"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.6 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>How Much On-Screen Violence Is Too Much? - Atlas Living Media<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/atlaslivingmedia.com\/?p=224\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"How Much On-Screen Violence Is Too Much? 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