this post was submitted on 14 Aug 2023
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Just watched 12 Monkeys (1996), and it's a little uncomfortable seeing Bruce Willis portray a character struggling mentally, know of his real-life problems with frontotemporal dementia. It's not the time of year yet, but I'm wondering if my enjoyment of Die Hard will be reduced, since the hearing loss he suffered on that film may have been a contributing factor.

The Crow (1994) - on which Brandon Lee died, and Rust (upcoming) - on which Halyna Hutchins died - aren't films I'd normally watch anyway, so I don't know how the deaths would have affected my decision to watch them. Conversely, Kevin Spacey is in a lot of films I like, but it's a bit queasy seeing his performances, with the suspicion that we all now know why he's so good at portraying creeps.

So do you just try to enjoy a film as a film, or does real-life events ever stop you re-watching them?

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

My original post is a loose collection of ideas that sort-of fit together and sort-of don't.

I think if properly examine why you should still see a film, you'll find lots of reasons to support doing so. I guess I'm mostly interested in what the instinctual reaction is, and whether anybody has to convince themselves to watch something, after initially finding something off-putting about it.