MovieChat Forums > The Andromeda Strain (1971) Discussion > Universal billed it as a family film!

Universal billed it as a family film!


It says in the trivia section that this was billed with Airport on a double bill as a "great family program". This is very surprising, considering the nudity, realistic simulated death of animals and the scenes of dead human all over that village.

What were they thinking!

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They were thinking with bigger brains back then, that's what!

First off, there's nothing sexual about a half-naked corpse, especially as portrayed in the movie. It's brief, like a pan-&-scan shot in a Ken Burns documentary. In fact, the entire movie has that cold, non-emotional feel.

Perhaps we were less prurient in those days too, when we'd not freak-out when National Geographic had a naked tribeswoman, or "Roots" portrayed life in Africa as it was. I think that when we all get over the sight of a naked breast, the world will live an happier life.

Secondly, the movie is clear that it's about a biological outbreak that kills a small town. "Kills" as in "dead", as in corpses-lying-everywhere-dead. Not "kills" like in everyone puts on white sheets and walks into the clouds. This is the real dead we're talking about.

If you're showing your children a movie about a biological accident that kills a town, you should expect to see dead people. Otherwise you should read the synopsis more carefully next time.

Lastly, a "G" rating doesn't mean it's Disney - it means approved for viewing by the General public. There's no cursing, no person-on-person violence, no sexuality in any form. Even "2001" was a G movie, and plenty of people died in that one.

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Hell, the film would get a PG-13 just for Ruth Leavitt's smoking now. Actually, I don't believe Hollywood would dare to depict a brilliant microbiologist as a smoker anymore. We have been carefully, and very successfully, dumbed down. We even treat adults like children now. These daze, Ruthie couldn't even light her cigarette in a bar.

To steal a phrase from Lewis Black, we have gone stone-cold f/k-nuts!

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Smoking should be kept out of movies, and society in gerneal for that matter. Other than that, the whole of the second post I agree with.

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[deleted]


Fanatics. Sheesh.


Alas, I think that kind of sentiment is par for the course nowadays.

Yes, I can understand someone wanting to dodge second-hand smoke, and that can make smoking in some places hard to deal with (i.e. how do you let smokers enjoy themselves without penalizing non-smokers?). However, when someone says smoking "should be kept out of movies, and society in general for that matter," it's their way of saying that they are perfectly comfortable making decisions for other people about things that don't concern them.

It's interesting (and depressing) that, in a film concerned with an alien "bug" wiping out life on Earth, 21st Century viewers consider a character lighting up a cigarette to be a noteworthy event. It's stuff like that that makes me wonder if the world is any better off in 2010 than it was in 1971. ¬_¬

Edit: awkward phrasing

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It seems to me that you're the fanatic. You are so eager to call the poster above a "Nazi" that you apparently don't even pause for a moment to think about what he/she said. There's a difference, and it's not so fine, between advocating that a behavior be outlawed - which is what I think has upset you - and recognition that it is extremely harmful.

The poster above does not advocate that smoking be outlawed, at least not in the post. Rather he/she suggests that smoking "should" be kept out of movies and society in general. Does anyone really disagree with that? Is there anyone who actually advocates smoking in real life or in movies - and consequently introducing it to succeeding generations?


Sarcasm is intellect on the offensive.

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The poster above does not advocate that smoking be outlawed, at least not in the post. Rather he/she suggests that smoking "should" be kept out of movies and society in general. Does anyone really disagree with that?


Yes: I do. Please think carefully about just what it is you're saying here and where it might lead.

I'm baffled as to how you arrived at the conclusion that you or I (or any group of people for that matter) should get to decide what should and should not be in films; that decision belongs to the filmmakers. If they want to include smoking in their film, great. If not, that's okay, too. However, that determination is best made by them and not by you and I.

If you and I are able to make such choices for them, it can't really be said to be their own film any longer, can it? I promise you that there are people in this world who would be perfectly happy if each and every film released was worthy of a "G" rating, had lots of sunshine and butterflies in it and....nothing else. If you think I'm kidding, listen to someone like, say, James Dobson (or someone like him; there's no shortage of such people) sometime and you'll see what I mean. Your apparent willingness to grant folks the power to tell other people what they should and shouldn't put into their films plays directly into the hands of people like that.

Look, I understand where you're coming from: it would probably be a nicer world if people didn't smoke. However, it can also be said that it would be a nicer world if people did not overeat, spit, look ugly, and flip other people off. However, as long as there are people, we can look forward to them doing these things. People, let's face it, are not perfect and the history books tell us that previous attempts to try to force people to be "perfect" according to some high ideal have not worked out well.

I'm not sure when it became okay to start saying it's perfectly acceptable to use films as social engineering tools, but, speaking for myself, I find that sort of thing TOTALLY CREEPY. If you feel differently, that's fine, but it's worth pointing out that folks who think social engineering is a great idea don't really seem to have thought out that the same social engineering that can be used to steer people toward good things can just as easily be used to steer people toward bad things.

It's all a matter of who happens to be behind the steering wheel. This is why ultimately, in the long run, it's better if we're all driving our own cars (for better or for worse).

Incidentally, I think you'll find that the real-life Nazis were very definitely anti-smoking crusaders, going so far as to coin the phrase "passive smoking," outlawing smoking in Nazi offices, schools, buses and trains, (sound familiar?) and restricting tobacco advertisements. I kid you not.

(Any similiarities between the world that the Nazis tried to create and the one that today's do-gooders are trying to foist upon us are, of course, purely coincidental.)











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I'm baffled as to how you arrived at the conclusion that you or I (or any group of people for that matter) should get to decide what should and should not be in films; that decision belongs to the filmmakers.
And I'm amazed that you misrepresent my position - while quoting the language I used to make it clear that is not my position or what I interpret as the stated position of SonOfEvermore! Perhaps you should think a little more carefully.

Incidentally, I think you'll find that the real-life Nazis were very definitely anti-smoking crusaders, going so far as to coin the phrase "passive smoking," outlawing smoking in Nazi offices, schools, buses and trains, (sound familiar?) and restricting tobacco advertisements. I kid you not.

(Any similiarities between the world that the Nazis tried to create and the one that today's do-gooders are trying to foist upon us are, of course, purely coincidental.)
And I hope you understand that I have a hard time maintaining respect for anyone who makes Nazi references while addressing someone else's opinions.


Move along. Nothing to see here.

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And I'm amazed that you misrepresent my position - while quoting the language I used to make it clear that is not my position or what I interpret as the stated position of SonOfEvermore! Perhaps you should think a little more carefully.


I think you'll find that I quoted you verbatim in my original post:


The poster above does not advocate that smoking be outlawed, at least not in the post. Rather he/she suggests that smoking "should" be kept out of movies and society in general. Does anyone really disagree with that?


It's pretty clear what your position is according to the above. I'm sorry you've (apparently) decided to change your mind afterward, but I'm not sure how you feel you can claim the above could possibly be misinterpreted. [scratches head]


Incidentally, I think you'll find that the real-life Nazis were very definitely anti-smoking crusaders, going so far as to coin the phrase "passive smoking," outlawing smoking in Nazi offices, schools, buses and trains, (sound familiar?) and restricting tobacco advertisements. I kid you not.

(Any similiarities between the world that the Nazis tried to create and the one that today's do-gooders are trying to foist upon us are, of course, purely coincidental.)

And I hope you understand that I have a hard time maintaining respect for anyone who makes Nazi references while addressing someone else's opinions.


I'm sure the do-gooders of today are going to be uncomfortable when compared to their precedents, but it's hardly my fault if what they are trying to do was attempted by others and the historical record indicates this.

The truth hurts, as they say.


Move along. Nothing to see here.


This we can agree on: just the same kind of people trying to advance the same tired old ideas. Please stop trying to tell other people what to do.

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lol

Okay. Thanks for letting me know I was wrong about what my position is on this issue.


Move along. Nothing to see here.

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What I am amazed about is that you question the fact of smoking in a movie that's 40 years old. Should we then go back and remove all smoking in old movies? In the 60's, 70's, even the 80' and later, many people smoked in movies, and it was commonly accepted, as much so as watching people drink to excess or use various toxic substances in more modern movies. If you are advocating the non-use of tobacco in modern movies, make that clear in the post.

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[deleted]

Most little kids would have been asleep within 30 min. of the beginning...too ceribral! Look That up in your Funk & Wagnals...

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>Incidentally, I think you'll find that the real-life Nazis were very
> definitely anti-smoking crusaders, going so far as to coin the
> phrase "passive smoking," outlawing smoking in Nazi offices, schools, buses
> and trains, (sound familiar?) and restricting tobacco advertisements. I kid
> you not.

Smoking was also banned in many states in the US in the early 20th century as a result of pressure from the Christians temperance movement (as was alcohol, heroin, cocaine, gambling etc.).

I found the following info, but I knew about this already from my work in public health.

from http://www.sadireland.com/smoking1.htm

1818: USA
Smoking is banned on the streets of Lancaster, Pennsylvania. The mayor is fined when he becomes the first man to break the law.
1840: USA
Smoking is banned in Boston
1893: USA
Washington State introduces legislation banning the sale and consumption of cigarettes
1898: USA
Total ban on cigarettes in the state of Tennessee
1900: USA
The sale of cigarettes is now outlawed in the states of Washington, Iowa, Tennessee and North Dakota
1904: USA
A women is sent to jail for 30 days by a New York judge for smoking in front of her children.
1905: USA
Indiana introduces a total cigarette ban
1907: USA
Washington passes legislation banning the manufacture, sale, exchange or giving away cigarettes, cigarette paper or wrappers
1914: USA
Smoking banned in the US Senate
1922: USA
15 States now have laws banning the sale, manufacture, possession and use of cigarettes

--------------------------
RIGOLETTO: I'm denied that common human right, to weep.

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ntsci: "Smoking was also banned in many states in the US in the early 20th century as a result of pressure from the Christians temperance movement (as was alcohol, heroin, cocaine, gambling etc)."

Yes, it was, and that's not common knowledge. We can see how well those laws worked out, including those that are still with us. In the long term today's anti-smoking laws will be no different, but for now they're wrecking small businesses (to the delight of the corporations that lobby for them), and destroying freedom and private property rights state by state.

The original American anti-smoking crusader was named Lucy Page Gaston. As Carrie Nation was to alcohol, Gaston was to tobacco. She even coined the terms "coffin nails" and "cigarette face," still in use today. Practically nobody knows where they originated.

As for her face, here's a page with a picture of her:

http://www.antibrains.com/preface.html

Lovely, delicate little flower, no? The expression of the guy standing next to her makes me laugh out loud. He's like, "WTF?"

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fast_fierce_and_funny: "(Any similiarities between the world that the Nazis tried to create and the one that today's do-gooders are trying to foist upon us are, of course, purely coincidental.)"

Heh-heh. Of course it's not. I agree with the rest of your post however, and laughed at that disclaimer.

But it's precisely the same mind-set no matter where it crops up. The anti-everything crowd loves to cite studies, and powerful lobby groups are more than happy to fund bogus studies that prove whatever the anti-everything people want proven. The scientific studies the Nazis used to "prove" that Jews are inferior are no different than the second-hand smoke studies of today. All that's changed is the group being demonized.

Maybe it's time somebody funded a study to prove that being a nosy busybody is a disorder in itself.

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I can't believe you'd equate studies investigating whether smoking is harmful with studies used to justify genocide. Unless you believe the results will be used to kill smokers or something. I also wanna point out that it's more than a little silly to insist the studies are bogus simply because you don't like the results.

"I mean, really, how many times will you look under Jabba's manboobs?"

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Wow. I went away for a few months, only to look in and discover I started a firestorm... or is it a smokestorm?

efs2: "...he/she suggests that smoking "should" be kept out of movies and society in general. Does anyone really disagree with that?"

You bet I disagree with that, and obviously so do many others. I see that you're a Nazi too. Not surprising. It is not a German type; it is a (sub)human type.

It's like this, sport: you do not own those "public places" (actually private businesses) where smoking is being banned by force of law (which always comes down to lethal force, if push comes to shove). Presumably, you do not produce, write or direct movies either. The people who put up the MONEY for those things should make the call. If nobody is being harmed against their will it's none of your business—or the business of the government—to decide what people may allow on their own property or depict in their own artwork. Customers enter a place of business voluntarily. If you don't like the voluntary behavior there, leave.

Got it? Can you understand that simple principle, Nazi Boy? Probably not. The diseased Nazi mind doesn't grasp such things. It thinks its own preferences should be the law of the land. It seems even to believe that its own preferences are laws of nature.

But here's how it really is: I am free to do as I like with my body and property, and you are free to shut up in my presence or when on my property. Espouse the crap that you are espousing in my actual, physical presence, and you'll have a lot bigger problem than a whiff of second-hand smoke.

I used to be a polite person. Well, no more. I have had enough of people like you.

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You call me "Nazi-boy" and then say that if I express an opinion you don't like in your presence you're going to what? beat me up?

lol

No irony there, huh?

Also, I notice that you are very selective in quoting my post. The entire paragraph is:

The poster above does not advocate that smoking be outlawed, at least not in the post. Rather he/she suggests that smoking "should" be kept out of movies and society in general. Does anyone really disagree with that? Is there anyone who actually advocates smoking in real life or in movies - and consequently introducing it to succeeding generations?
I don't think anyone with a measureable IQ and an open mind could interpret that as advocating that smoking be banned by law in movies or elsewhere. But your posts are so juvenile that I suspect you don't really care that you have thoroughly misrepresented what I said. Still, I'm curious. Leaving out what SonOfEvermore said for the sake of simplifying the issue, how exactly do you interpret what I said as advocating that smoking be banned by law in movies or elsewhere?


Move along. Nothing to see here.

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efs2:

"The poster above does not advocate that smoking be outlawed, at least not in the post. Rather he/she suggests that smoking 'should' be kept out of movies and society in general. Does anyone really disagree with that? Is there anyone who actually advocates smoking in real life or in movies - and consequently introducing it to succeeding generations?"
"I don't think anyone with a measureable IQ and an open mind could interpret that as advocating that smoking be banned by law in movies or elsewhere. But your posts are so juvenile that I suspect you don't really care that you have thoroughly misrepresented what I said. Still, I'm curious. Leaving out what SonOfEvermore said for the sake of simplifying the issue, how exactly do you interpret what I said as advocating that smoking be banned by law in movies or elsewhere?"

How do you propose that smoking "be kept out"?

How do you propose that we avoid "introducing it to succeeding generations"?

I am really curious about your answers to those questions.

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The poster above does not advocate that smoking be outlawed, at least not in the post. Rather he/she suggests that smoking "should" be kept out of movies and society in general. Does anyone really disagree with that? Is there anyone who actually advocates smoking in real life or in movies - and consequently introducing it to succeeding generations?


I don't think anyone with a measureable IQ and an open mind could interpret that as advocating that smoking be banned by law in movies or elsewhere


[raises hands in an "okay, okay" gesture]

The problem is, with the particular phrasing you used, it does sound very much like you are posing a rhetorical question there. That is, a rhetorical question is a device used by writers/speakers to guide their audience to a particular foregone conclusion (in this case, that no one could possibly be an advocate for smoking).

Seriously, that was very much the impression I was under. If my impression was wrong, then I apologize. As I say, though, I read it as being a rhetorical question.

Just so we are all clear here: I am not, by any means, an advocate of smoking. For the record, my dad was a smoker and I could see its effects firsthand and close-up. I didn't particularly like them.

That being said, I do not necessarily have to be an "advocate" of something to understand and appreciate that other folks may take pleasure in an activity that I, myself, might not approve of. The problem lies in that there is always some activity that you or I (or someone) does not approve of and would like to see done away with.

The question is: just where do we draw the line?

I can understand perfectly why some people would get very upset at a smoker lighting up next to them. The problem is that that same mindset is rarely (if ever) content with stopping after one so-called "social problem" (real or imagined) has been solved. I have no doubt whatsoever that the War on Smoking is going to be succeeded by the War on Obesity or the War on Gas-Guzzlers or the War on Tooth Decay or...whatever.

The fact of the matter is that a great deal of the world's misery has been caused by people trying to tell other folks how they ought to live. It's been played out (and continues to be played out) again and again, from the Christian temperance movement, (as noted above) to the War on Drugs, to the current environmental movement.

Everyone has the right to decide what is best for themselves, no question. And if your neighbor, for instance, suddenly decides that installing a smelting plant in his backyard would be a Great Idea, fine: take him/her to court and prove that the smelting plant/biker bar/whorehouse they have open is detrimental to the neighborhood in some recognizable, quantifiable way.

The catch is that a great deal of what people disapprove of is purely a matter of value judgments rather than any sort of recognizable harm taking place. So while I may not like other folks, say, smoking next to me, the case for second-hand smoke causing cancer is far from an open and shut one. However, because a great number of people have decided that Smoking is Bad, this has translated, in practical terms, to smokers getting pushed around.

Which for me, personally, would be fine. However, I know full well that the Endless Crusade to Make the World a Better Place is not going to stop there. Assuming that smoking is completely banned at some point, (it won't be; tax revenues = nicotine for governments) the same folks who gave smokers usch a bad time are going to move on and persecute an entirely new group of folks who are doing Something That is Bad for Them.

If someone doesn't like smoking, fine: they shouldn't do it. At the same time, they should leave whoever does like smoking the hell alone. If, on the other hand, the smoking is taking place in a so-called "public area," (e.g. not at a private business or on private property) it is up to the anti-smokers to come up with hard evidence that allowing smoking in such an area is detrimental to the property rights of non-smokers in some real, meaningful, and, above all, quantifiable way.

Otherwise....they're just blowing so much smoke.

As I say: I don't like smoking myself. However, the people who want to see smoking banned are a lot less concerned with smoking, per se, and a lot more concerned with being able to tell other people what to do.

To borrow a phrase, I don't think anyone with a measureable IQ and an open mind should fail to see that.

Now, I understand if the person reading this has the complete opposite position from mine. And that's okay. But the bottom line for me in all of this is simple: don't tell me what to do.

I don't care how right you think you are and I don't care how harmful you think something is: unless you can demonstrate that what I am doing is, somehow, depriving you of your property rights, please keep your lip zipped and find something else to do with your time. The world does not need saving and particularly not by the type of people who seem anxious to appoint themselves experts on What the World Really Needs and who, in my own experience, are some of the biggest wannabe surrogate parents and petty fascists around.
























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I agree with a lot of what you wrote.

Ironic, huh?

lol

I am not an anti-smoking fanatic, but I generally support the voluntary effort of filmmakers to remove smoking from movies. My take on it is that the portrayal of smoking in movies almost certainly contributes to some degree to the number of people who start smoking each year. And I think many if not most or practically all of us would rather reduce that number.

I say that knowing the cost is that movies are diminished to varying degrees. And in contrast to my position on smoking, I am a movie fanatic. To cite a particular example: Blade Runner is one of my all-time favorite movies. I think it is just gorgeous. And one of the most visually mesmerizing scenes involves a woman smoking while answering a detective's questions.

But, for me, the cost-to-benefit ratio definitely favors axing the cigarettes.

And the same holds true for my support for the voluntary removal of smoking from society in general. I think that if people didn't smoke in front of young people, fewer of them would start smoking. But that's probably like wishing for the end of war. I have never felt the desire to smoke, and I apparently do not have an addictive personality. But I know there are many people out there who do, who just can't put 'em down, no matter how much they'd like to. Still, as I asked before, does anyone disagree with the idea that we'd be better off if smoking just disappeared?

One area where I disagree with you, I think, is on the significance of the question of whether second-hand smoke causes significant harm to health in maintaining the truce between smokers and non-smokers. That is an important question, but not the only one. There is also the question of annoyance, or whatever word would be appropriate. In my case, breathing cigarette smoke is very unpleasant. Enough of it gives me a headache and makes me nauseous. I'm old enough that I grew up when people smoked everywhere, and non-smokers just had to put up with it. So I generally don't complain but rather avoid places where there is smoking, or likely to be smoking. And that is true of many other non-smokers as well. Nonetheless, I think the argument that someone else's right to smoke does not include the right to make me smoke applies regardless of whether second-hand smoke causes cancer or emphysema or no significant health problems. Also, this is where I think the slippery-slope argument - i.e., the "War On Obesity" is next - fails. One person's choice to do the things that cause him or her to be obese does not include forcing me to do them also.

More appropriate is this analogy, I think: if I want to sit and enjoy my lunch alone with my thoughts or while having a conversation with a friend, but the guy at the next table wants to bust mad rhymes at high volume on his boombox, what would be more appropriate, making me choose between putting up with it and leaving, or making him choose between turning it off and leaving?

So the bottom line for me is that I have no interest in forcing anyone to stop smoking or over-eating or whatever else he or she chooses to over-do. But neither do I wish to be forced to participate, regardless of whether it has any significant effects on my health.


Move along. Nothing to see here.

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efs2: "...I think many if not most or practically all of us would rather reduce that number."

I couldn't care less what other people do for pleasure. It's none of my business.

efs2: "To cite a particular example: Blade Runner is one of my all-time favorite movies. I think it is just gorgeous. And one of the most visually mesmerizing scenes involves a woman smoking while answering a detective's questions... But, for me, the cost-to-benefit ratio definitely favors axing the cigarettes."

And for me it doesn't, precisely for the aesthetic reason you cited. It creates an ambiance that is not achievable any other way. It looks fabulous on film.

There are groups that want to remove all of the violence from films too, and all of the sex, and whatever else they find objectionable. They use the same logic you do: "It encourages violence! It encourages drug use! It encourages sex! It encourages drinking/smoking/whatever!" I'm sick of it.

We've gone down this road before. The Comics Code turned comic books into pabulum for about three decades, just as the EC line was turning them into high art. Special interest groups turned animated cartoons into absolute crap from the 'sixties through the 'eighties—we had a vast wasteland between Bugs Bunny and Animaniacs. Keep your grubby hands off my art.

This is of special interest to me because I'm an animator. The female character in this piece, http://bit.ly/8YMyof, smokes through part of it. I did that for at least three reasons: the character is mimicking what my voice actress was really doing during the take; in the story that character is from, she's a smoker, and I like the look. I like the edge it gives to the character's personality. Tell me not to use it, and I'll tell you to mind your own business. Go produce your own animation. Go slam out some Care Bears or My Little Ponies. Knock yourself out.

efs2: "Still, as I asked before, does anyone disagree with the idea that we'd be better off if smoking just disappeared?"

Yes, I disagree with it, because many people find it so pleasurable and aesthetically attractive that they do it in spite of the risks. You might find pleasure, ambiance and aesthetics disposable, but I don't. In any event, for those reasons and those reasons only, people do it. You're not going to stop it without the force of law... excuse me: you're not going to stop it even with the force of law because that hasn't stopped pot use, opiate use, the use of hallucinogens or anything else. In fact, pot is more popular now than it was in 1937, when it was banned through a tricky use of tax stamps (the government required a tax stamp, then simply did not issue them).

Wanna-be social engineers have done as much or more damage to this country than any other factor.

efs2: "One area where I disagree with you, I think, is on the significance of the question of whether second-hand smoke causes significant harm to health in maintaining the truce between smokers and non-smokers. That is an important question, but not the only one."

It is not an important question, and here's why: private property rights trump it. When you go down that road, you can use it as a precedent for anything. Keep your hands off my property, and keep your hands off my body.

It's time we ended the stupid War on Drugs. The anti-tobacco movement is only the thin end of the wedge for adding another substance to it. Again, get your hands off my body and property. If you don't like it, don't do it. If you don't like what's happening on someone else's property, leave. Mind your own business.

efs2: "There is also the question of annoyance, or whatever word would be appropriate."

Annoyance. Ben Franklin wrote, "Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety deserve neither Liberty nor Safety." Now Americans are such wimps, they'll give up liberty not only for safety, but merely because they're annoyed!

Do you see the problem with that? Perhaps you don't, but many of us do and we're sick of it.

I stand by my observation that you're a Nazi. You're following the same logical path that all fascists use. You're simply at the rational-sounding end of the spectrum, one step over the line so to speak—again, the thin end of the wedge. At the other end there are the howling lunatics. Both ends are necessary for social change (for the worse or for the better; for less freedom or more) and you are arguing for more restriction whether you realize it or not.

efs2: "One person's choice to do the things that cause him or her to be obese does not include forcing me to do them also."

The "experts" disagree with you: http://bit.ly/cbCoI

In fact, the second-hand smoke studies are completely bogus. They arose from a Rand Corporation study that showed the anti-smoking movement had gone as far as it could go by trying to scare smokers. For further success, studies would have to "prove" that smoking was harmful to those anywhere near it. So, the EPA was the first to jump aboard (it's findings were proven bogus, vacated by a federal judge, then reinstated on a legal technicality—they were "never intended to influence policy"—hah!) then other so-called experts jumped on the gravy boat. "Proving" the dangers of second-hand (and now "third-hand," believe it or not) smoke has become a bleeding industry.

If you want to "prove" something, all it takes is money. A vast number of unscrupulous PhDs will line up for the grants.

This is now called "The Tobacco Model for Social Control," and it's going to be used again and again. As the link I provided shows, they're already spinning "second-hand fat." They'll use it for anything, and idiots will believe it. Again, it's "For the Children." Who could disagree with such a noble cause, eh?

Most people will believe anything that confirms their prejudices.

efs2: "More appropriate is this analogy, I think: if I want to sit and enjoy my lunch alone with my thoughts or while having a conversation with a friend, but the guy at the next table wants to bust mad rhymes at high volume on his boombox, what would be more appropriate, making me choose between putting up with it and leaving, or making him choose between turning it off and leaving?"

That depends. What does the owner encourage on his property? If you're in a coffee house where most of the customers are 18 to 21 years old and they're all up and dancing to the guy's boom box, and you're sitting there with your laptop trying to get some work done on the owner's WiFi, fuming, you should get up and leave.

It's really very simple: property rights trump everything else. The only time law enforcement should become involved is if somebody is dragged onto the property and forced to participate in something against their will.

Otherwise, it's none of your business.

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Got it. You are either unable or unwilling to address what I actually said and instead are determined to twist it into something else. And resort to childish name-calling.

But I'm curious about something, although I doubt I will get a direct answer. In response to my suggestion that reducing the number of people who start smoking every year is a worthy goal that most would support, you said:

I couldn't care less what other people do for pleasure. It's none of my business.
So if you had a 13-year-old child and caught him smoking, what would you do?


Move along. Nothing to see here.

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efs2: "You are either unable or unwilling to address what I actually said and instead are determined to twist it into something else. And resort to childish name-calling."

I did address what you actually said. You said you supported filmmakers voluntarily removing smoking from their films; I said I didn't, and wouldn't. So, if it's not done voluntarily, what do you propose? I asked that earlier. I haven't seen you directly address my questions either.

As for the name-calling, if the shoe fits, wear it.

efs2: "So if you had a 13-year-old child and caught him smoking, what would you do?"

I would ask where he got them and remind him that it's technically illegal until a person is 18, then I'd have a talk to whoever provided them. I might even go so far as to get the law involved, because a 13-year-old is not as tough as an adult. Their cells are dividing like crazy. But, I know in my heart that it's impossible to completely control a teenager. Cracking down too hard doesn't make things better; it makes them worse.

When he turns 18, it's none of my business.

Now, you tell me, quid pro quo: why are you so interested in other people's children?

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So you would not consider it appropriate to have a heart-to-heart talk with your 13-year-old about the health effects of smoking? Or that his life will be much better if he doesn't smoke?

Also, "other people's children"?

lol

In case you didn't notice, the 13-year-old in this discussion is a fiction created for the purpose of discussion. But keep making stuff up and trying to bait me. I'm sure you think it really makes you look smart.


Move along. Nothing to see here.

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efs2: "So you would not consider it appropriate to have a heart-to-heart talk with your 13-year-old about the health effects of smoking? Or that his life will be much better if he doesn't smoke?"

No. At 13 I'd say as little as possible; at 14 I'd warn him that the government lies, the health cartel lies, that smoking and drugs aren't as dangerous as conventional "wisdom" says they are and to keep his eyes open and his hand on his wallet. If smoking is the worst thing he ever does, I'll breathe a sigh of relief. I'll just be glad if he doesn't turn into a whiny little Health Nazi. There's nothing hypothetical about that.

efs2: "But keep making stuff up and trying to bait me. Im sure you think it really makes you look smart."

I am smart. I was a member of both Mensa (top 2%) and Intertel (top 1%) for several years, until I decided that paying dues to carry "smart cards" was stupid. There's nothing to keep me from lying here of course, and no reason for you to believe it, but I know; therefore, insulting my intelligence just makes me laugh.

Actually, you've shown your true colors here, and I've shown mine. Yes, I'm a verbally-abusive bastard when confronted with ideologies that disgust me, but I'll cop to being exactly what I am.

You can't even see the holes in your arguments. You apparently don't know they are there. But, you're the one who's concerned with other people's pleasures and works of art, and I'm not.

Others can see that, even if you can't. Saying that I don't understand your argument makes no sense. I understand what you're saying better than you do. You said others "should" do something; I said I have no intention of doing as you suggest—ever. That leaves you with three alternatives: advocate forcing me to do as you prefer by force of law; continue blathering about how you haven't said what you've said ad infinitum, or shrugging it off and minding your own business.

What's it going to be? You've never answered that.

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And you never answered my question: how could anyone reasonably interpret the brief paragraph in my original post as advocating a legal ban on cigarettes in movies or in society in general?

The poster above does not advocate that smoking be outlawed, at least not in the post. Rather he/she suggests that smoking "should" be kept out of movies and society in general. Does anyone really disagree with that? Is there anyone who actually advocates smoking in real life or in movies - and consequently introducing it to succeeding generations?
Nonetheless, you go a step further and advance a slippery-slope argument in support of your opposition to the voluntary removal of smoking from movies: it will lead to other "undesireable" activities being lost from movies. Such arguments require a leap of faith. Maybe, maybe not. But if filmmakers start removing those elements voluntarily, what is the alternative? Making them mandatory?

Hey, you, director! The Committee For Freedom has looked over your script and found no smoking, drug use or violence! This is entirely unacceptable! Rewrite the script immediately, or you will be sent to Freedom Prison!
Also, you seem to be saying that things should be like they used to be as far as smoking in public areas. That non-smokers should just have to put up with it. That the right of a smoker to smoke outweighs the right of a non-smoker not to smoke. In short, smokers have a right to make non-smokers smoke in public places. Is that right?

And in support of this, you pull out the argument that studies are inconclusive regarding whether second-hand smoke causes serious health problems? So it does not matter that smoke gives me and other non-smokers headaches and makes us sick? That's the price we must pay to live in a "free" society?


Move along. Nothing to see here.

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]efs2: "And you never answered my question: how could anyone reasonably interpret the brief paragraph in my original post as advocating a legal ban on cigarettes in movies or in society in general?"

Actually I have, at length. In a way, so did fast_fierce_and_funny above, when he said, "If my definition matches yours, then filmmakers can currently be said to be excercising their right to include/not include smoking in their films voluntarily." I don't believe your definitions match, because I've repeatedly pointed out that your saying filmmakers "should" do as you prefer, absent of coercion, is pie-in-the-sky nonsense.

Maybe you prefer soundbites: I interpreted the paragraph in your original post as advocating bans and other forms of coercion because there is no other realistic way to force your preference on others.

There. Clear now? Does that answer your question?

]efs2: "...you go a step further and advance a slippery-slope argument in support of your opposition to the voluntary removal of smoking from movies..."

You bet I do, because the slippery slope is a very real phenomenon. Observation and deduction, my dear... whoever. First, anti-smokers wanted separate sections in restaurants. Reasonable enough. Then they wanted walls and expensive separate air-handling systems. Then, just as restaurant and bar owners had spent thousands on compliance, they banned smoking completely in California—then, state by state, on to the rest of the country and the whole western world! Now they're applying what worked best to the War On Fat: http://bit.ly/cbCoI

So, don't try to tell me that the slippery slope, the thin end of the wedge, does not exist. It's like saying, "Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain." I'll laugh at you. Of course it exists. As a species, we've slid down it time and time again.

]efs2: "Hey, you, director! The Committee For Freedom has looked over your script and found no smoking, drug use or violence! This is entirely unacceptable! Rewrite the script immediately, or you will be sent to Freedom Prison!"

Stop being stupid. I advocate NO coercion, and that goes both ways. The problem with that is, you can't have your preference adopted by society without it, which is why your argument has been ridiculous from the beginning.

]efs2: "...you seem to be saying that things should be like they used to be as far as smoking in public areas. That non-smokers should just have to put up with it."

No, I'm not saying that. What I'm advocating is much closer to what fast_fierce_and_funny proposed when he suggested non-smoking and smokers-only establishments.

The only place where I disagree with him (and it's not much of a disagreement—I completely agree with where he's coming from) is that a sign on the door should be enough: "NO SMOKING" or "SMOKING PERMITTED." "Smokers Only" is a bit too much like segregation. Most non-smokers are not as sensitive as you are. They're fine with a smoking-permitted venue. The "NO SMOKING" venues would be for people like you, who want to voluntarily segregate themselves.

]efs2: "So it does not matter that smoke gives me and other non-smokers headaches and makes us sick?"

No, it doesn't, because you're indulging in a gross exaggeration. Most non-smokers aren't bothered by smoke. Before the Big Pharma and Big Government anti-smoking hype started, you almost never heard a complaint from anyone. The steady drumbeat of propaganda has been creating psychosomatic reactions. If the news media reported for years and years that your tap water was poisonous and had a petroleum stench, people would start smelling it and getting sick. Psychosomatic reactions, incidentally, aren't "all in your head." They start there, but the symptoms are very real.

There have always been a few people who really can't handle smoke. I feel sorry for them, but society has no more right to ban smoking on their behalf than it does to ban amusement parks because people with back injuries can't ride the rides.

Beyond those points, fast_fierce_and_funny has spoken for me very well. The only other quibble I might have (and it's another minor one) is that the EPA study that is still used as the basis for the bans was proven 100% bogus. They had to torture the numbers and cook the books even to produce their relatively innocuous findings. As I said earlier, it was vacated by a federal judge who was shocked at how shoddy it was. Please see this:

http://www.sepp.org/Archive/reality/courtrules.html

Then it was appealed and reinstated because it "was never intended to influence public policy." What a lie! The government still stands behind it, because it is the foundation of the bans. At about the same time, the World Health Organization was doing its own study—the most lengthy and comprehensive ever done—then the WHO refused to publicize its own study. Why? Because it found no statistically significant risk for non-smokers who lived or worked with smokers, and worse, the only statistically significant number that turned up was a decrease in the risk of lung cancer among the children of smokers.

http://www.cigarmony.com/theworldhealthorganizationsstudyon2ndhandsmok e.aspx

The WHO covered up its own study—the best ever done—that showed no harm, then proceeded to lie. Now you can find almost nothing online about it. I just checked, and the links to most of the original articles are dead, replaced by lies and propaganda. Don't take my word for it; do the research. But, I'm virtually certain that you will look only at the data that confirms your own prejudices.

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I interpreted the paragraph in your original post as advocating bans and other forms of coercion because there is no other realistic way to force your preference on others.
Even though the explicit point of my brief post is that SonOfEvermore did not advocate a ban?

You just assume something contradictory to the words of the posts and feel free to start calling us "Nazis" based on your assumption?

Please. Tell me again how smart you are.


Move along. Nothing to see here.

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efs2: "Please. Tell me again how smart you are."

I can't. The only sensible thing you've said in this discussion is when you implied that my IQ is not measurable. That's true; it's not. The psychometrician said the WAIS gets inaccurate out at the lip of the bell curve, and she wouldn't give me a hard number, just a range.

I suppose you could now make some witty comment about which lip of the curve I'm on, but since I'm able to write it should be obvious.

I'm done with this discussion. You may now have the last word. Losers always get that option.

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I am not an anti-smoking fanatic, but I generally support the voluntary effort of filmmakers to remove smoking from movies.


Let's define just what "voluntary" means here. The IRS, for example, claims with a perfectly straight face that I am able to pay taxes "voluntarily" when I am doing nothing of the kind; there is a very definite threat of negative sanctions being held over the heads of taxpayers.

So, for myself, when someone is performing an action voluntarily, they are doing it of their own free will, with no outside interference, pressure, or threat of negative sanctions.

If my definition matches yours, then filmmakers can currently be said to be excercising their right to include/not include smoking in their films voluntarily. That is, each filmmaker is making the decision on his/her own. Is this not a satisfactory arrangement?

OTOH, if some kind of pressure group steps in and threatens to, say, boycott filmmaker X's films because they depict smoking, then any kind of "voluntary" action has gone out the window. The filmmaker in that case, should they decide to give in, is merely succumbing to the threat of negative sanctions.


My take on it is that the portrayal of smoking in movies almost certainly contributes to some degree to the number of people who start smoking each year.


While I think it's great that you have your own personal "take" on the matter, I would ask that there be 2-3 double-blind scientific studies done that allow us to assign some hard numbers as to just how bad the problem is (or isn't).

Speaking for myself, most of the films I've taken in over the half-decade are pre-1960 ones. That being the case, I've been exposed to quite of bit of screen-time smoking. Yet, despite this almost non-stop exposure to cinematic smoking, I haven't been tempted to head over to the tobacconists after seeing a film like M.


And I think many if not most or practically all of us would rather reduce that number.


Okay, here's the deal:

If you want to talk about what you yourself do and don't like, I'm all for that.

However, you have no way of knowing the exact wants and desires of other folks without, at the very least, conducting some sort of poll with a) a meaningful sampling size and b) value-neutral questions (e.g. no asking "Do you believe that cigarettes should be depicted in films, despite the fact that merely opening a pack of cigarettes can result in instant death or disfigurement?).

So while I can understand and appreciate that you yourself might not be an advocate of smoking being depicted in films, your saying "I think many if not most or practically all of us would rather...." is you trying to impose your own set of values and beliefs on other folks. Folks who not only might be unfamiliar with them, but who might be in vehement disagreement with them/you if they only knew what you are declaring that "they" are thinking.

IOW: you're projecting here. While you're certainly free to speak for yourself, purporting to speak for others is something with which I am not okay.


One area where I disagree with you, I think, is on the significance of the question of whether second-hand smoke causes significant harm to health in maintaining the truce between smokers and non-smokers. That is an important question, but not the only one.


I agree that this is indeed an important question. Unfortunately, as near as I can make out, it's one that still has not been answered conclusively. Anti-smoking advocates are fond of quoting the EPA's 1993 report to support their position. However, the report apparently says that a nonsmoker living with a smoker for 30 to 40 years would have better than a 99.9% chance of not getting lung cancer from such long-term and constant exposure (based upon the claimed 19% increase over the base rate of .4%).

If this is indeed the case (and if there aren't any more recent studies to help us decide one way or the other) the numbers butressing the anti-smoking position don't appear to be all that impressive.



There is also the question of annoyance, or whatever word would be appropriate. In my case, breathing cigarette smoke is very unpleasant. Enough of it gives me a headache and makes me nauseous. I'm old enough that I grew up when people smoked everywhere, and non-smokers just had to put up with it. So I generally don't complain but rather avoid places where there is smoking, or likely to be smoking. And that is true of many other non-smokers as well. Nonetheless, I think the argument that someone else's right to smoke does not include the right to make me smoke applies regardless of whether second-hand smoke causes cancer or emphysema or no significant health problems.


Okay, well, this would appear to be a question of property rights.

Are these headaches you get obtained when you are standing on private property (i.e. you're in/near a restaurant)? Or are they gotten when you are standing in some sort of "public area" that is not privately-owned? In the former case, the property owner may have decided for his/herself that they are going to allow smoking on their property which, it being their property, it is their right to decide.

OTOH, if you're standing on, say, a publicly-owned sidewalk and are hit with a whiff of smoke, it's not unreasonable to ask you to prove that it is the smoke (and not, say, loud car horns) that is giving you the headache.

I agree that no one should have the right to give you a headache or make you sick. However, I can make the same claim to getting a headache/becoming nauseous whenever I am exposed to "rap" music.

This does not, however, make a strong case for the banning of "rap" music.

Likewise, perhaps you know (or worse, work with) people who angrily insist on drenching themselves in perfume or cologne. I have friends who complain, as you do, of headaches and nausea after being exposed to such, um, scent enthusiasts. Who gets to decide what level of cologne or perfume is publicly acceptable?


Also, this is where I think the slippery-slope argument - i.e., the "War On Obesity" is next - fails.


I suppose that all depends on the view you happen to take of human nature. My own view, which is borne out by the legislative record here in the US, is that the world is filled with people who are perfectly comfortable making choices for other people, despite those choices actually being none of their business.

For instance, my personal intake of soft drinks does not impact your own happiness in any way. Yet, despite this, there have, apparently, been calls in some parts of the US for some sort of punitive tax to be placed on "sugary drinks" in order to discourage their consumption. IOW: despite the fact that my neighbor's intake of soda cannot be said to effect me, there are politicians out there who are more than happy to levy punitive taxes against folks who drink lots of soda.

So, yes, the whole "slippery slope" argument might not hold up in the Real World; we will have to wait and see if it does. However, human nature being what it is, I'm willing to make a Gentlemens' Bet that something like soft drink consumption (or salt intake) is going to legislated against in the near-future, simply because it is claimed to be "bad for you" and not because it has an impact on the happiness (or property rights) of others.

Again, such legislation has less to do with a legitimate concern for one's fellow human beings and more to do with people who get off on making decisions for others, despite their being entirely unqualified to make such decisions.


One person's choice to do the things that cause him or her to be obese does not include forcing me to do them also.


Well, as I've tried to point out, the evidence that I'm familiar with that supports the claim that being exposed to second-hand smoke is just the same as you taking up smoking yourself seems sketchy at best. [shrugs]



More appropriate is this analogy, I think: if I want to sit and enjoy my lunch alone with my thoughts or while having a conversation with a friend, but the guy at the next table wants to bust mad rhymes at high volume on his boombox, what would be more appropriate, making me choose between putting up with it and leaving, or making him choose between turning it off and leaving?


Actually, the problem you're presenting isn't that difficult to work out.

Restaurants generally being on private property, (I don't know of any "public restaurants" myself) the question to ask here is: what does the owner of the restaurant have to say about this? Is the customer with the boombox, perhaps, a Big Spender and, as a result, is allowed to play his boombox as loud as he likes?

Or is he, instead, a nuisance that is going to drive away other customers and, by doing so, deprive the restaurant owner of badly-needed income?

IOW: it's up to the person who owns (or manages) the restaurant to make the call. You can change "guy with a boombox" to "guy who farts loudly and often" and the decision-making process is still going to be largely the same.

Believe it or don't, I go through a variation of the problem you've presented quite often: a restaurant I frequent is on a busy streetcorner. That being the case, some....person.....with a painfully loud car stero typically cruises by several times an hour. We're talking about a main thoroughfare here, so such happenings really aren't all that surprising.

My choice is simple: I can either continue to eat there (i.e. not lose my rag over some moron who confuses noise with music) or find another restaurant that doesn't have street sounds penetrating into it.

Alas, the public roadway being the public roadway, busting people with overly-loud car stereos is hard to do. The fact that these folks are only there for a minute or two at most (e.g. stopped at a stoplight at the intersection) makes calling the cops impractical; by the time the cops would show up, the dipstick with the car stereo would have long since moved on. It's irritating, certainly, (and upsetting to my digestion, probably) but not much can be done about this problem on a practical level.

Since we're talking about real-world-type problems, I think it's only fair to point out that smokers in some cities now have no place to go to smoke thanks to anti-smoking ordinances. So while I feel for you being annoyed, (as I point out above, I know the feeling) it's only fair to ask if, perhaps, the existence of "smoking only" restaurants might help alleviate the problem of your encountering smokers during mealtimes?

To be clear: I can understand why you might have hard feelings against someone lighting up, say, on a public sidewalk. However, I am less clear on why state and local governments feel that they have the right to decide what does and does not happen on private property between consenting adults. "Smoking only" restaurants and bars would seem to go a long way toward solving the problem, but anti-smoking legislation is, as near as I can make out, an all-or-nothing kind of deal and does not make such allowances.





Edit: clarification of example














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You talk a lot about the rights of individual property owners to allow smoking. But this cuts both ways. If they have the right to allow smoking, one could argue they also have the right to disallow it. For example, if you came into someone's store or restaurant and they didn't allow smoking inside, by your own logic you would have to abide by their rules on their property.

If you want to smoke on your own property nobody can or should tell you different. But the same holds true for people who don't want cigarette smoke in their homes or their places of business. I assume however you only feel that the government shouldn't decide for the people one way or the other. I just thought I should mention, amid all the discussion covering only the rights of smokers, that non-smokers have some rights, too, whilst also speaking up as an apparently rare non-smoker who doesn't want cigarettes banned.

"I mean, really, how many times will you look under Jabba's manboobs?"

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people smoke in real life. they should be allowed to smoke in movies. according to you if a movie about a person who gets lung cancer from smoking is made. the character can't smoke.

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Well, then cars, trucks and factories should be kept out of movies as well.

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Hell, the film would get a PG-13 just for Ruth Leavitt's smoking now. Actually, I don't believe Hollywood would dare to depict a brilliant microbiologist as a smoker anymore. We have been carefully, and very successfully, dumbed down. We even treat adults like children now.


I found your comment a valuable one, mainly because it helped me to realize why the vast majority of my favorite films are dated before 1960.

Political correctness doesn't seem to have helped film at all. People do things like drink and smoke and have epileptic fits (as shown in this film). Unfortunately, the films made today don't reflect the everyday aspects of life as well as they once did. Instead, we (the audience) are often expected to buy into some kind of idealized version of existence.......and it doesn't really work.

Honestly, I've seen so many older films now, I hardly notice when a character smokes. I'm guessing that someone fed on a diet of, say, post 1990 films would be taken aback at seeing a character light up (definitely a PC no-no) that they'd get hung up on that and miss whatever else was going on. Sad.

Thank God I have access to a movie palace that plays films from an era when people actually lived rather than went through some weird facsimile of living like people seem to do today.


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The original ads showed a "G" rating but added "may be too intense for younger children".

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There is no definitive proof that second hand smoke is harmful. It is impossible to scientifically prove that the smoke versus all the other harmful stimuli a person inhales is the culprit. Many smokers live to be very old, and others die of lung cancer young without any smoking at all. I believe that smoking is probably harmful, which is why I quit before my 1st son was born to give him a better chance of health. What I despise is stupid people demanding or allowing our government to mandate smoking out of existence because I knew it would lead to the next logical step. Philadelphia is proposing to start taxing sugary sodas, like they did with cigarettes. So soon, if the idiotic populace who demand to be protected yet refuse to take responsibility for themselves allow it, it will be illegal to be overweight. And for anyone who thinks this is not invasive and disgusting think they are not troubled by this, the BMI index is completely flawed and says that a 6 foot male should weigh no more than 160 pounds or so, which is anorexic. So please stop crying because you saw someone smoke in a movie, and stop demanding our government dictate every aspect of your choices in life, you will not like where that leads.

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Are you really defending smoking here? I'd have to bet you are Trump supporter for your outburst on political correctness. Check the animal studies ... they don't just make this stuff up, second-hand smoke has a long-term effect.

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You are disgusting. Honestly, why haven't you been banned yet?

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"These daze"

Dumbed down ... you made your case, so because of you all of us have to suffer?

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no sexuality in any form

I don't know. The decontamination scenes turned me on.

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It's entirely in context. And if you don't want your children to grow up to be uptight idiots like yourself you should encourage them to watch intelligent film and programming such as this.

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Um, wasn't this post originally about a movie called "The Andromeda Strain"? Got a teensy-weensy bit off track...

Having said that, I think the ratings system has changed so much in the last 40 years that we tend to look at it through a skewed lens. The general trend has been, IMO, to make gratuitous violence more commonplace and sexuality more condemned. Even though the nudity in this film is not at all sexual, I doubt it would be rated "G" simply because the nudity is there in the first place (the context doesn't matter). If this film were rated today, my guess is it would get a "PG" rating.

Sweet merciful crap!

It's just tea! *sips* Needs more gin.

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Thanks for talking about the actual movie.
As for the G rating - I nearly went to see this on my 12th birthday, courtesy of the trailer. I doubt I could have handled the corpses, much less the science.
(Mind you,worse double bill the same year - Willy Wonka & The Hellstrom Chronicle, which shows actual footage of army ants eating an iguana alive. What kind of "families" did the studios think watched these films? Texas Chainsaw Massacre clan?)

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LOL. And AIRPORT had adulterous sex, mention of abortion, a woman being injured by a bomb...yet I saw both of these, AIRPORT at 13, and ANDROMEDA at 14. I'm fine.

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i would be very surprised if this film could retain the average child's interest, even in the early 2970s.


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I think that if movies still exist at all in the early 2970s, they will be radically different from what we are accustomed to today. Maybe this message board will still be around at that time, and somebody can post their thoughts on this matter.

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I saw it at a drive-in with my family. I was 8. And while it didn't traumatize me, it certainly held my attention.


My people skills are fine. It's my tolerance of morons that needs work.

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> My people skills are fine.

And we're supposed to trust your subjective and biased judgement on that? ;-)
Perhaps that needs more thought, everyone thinks that, or at least says it.

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what?? 



Libera te tu temet ex inferis.
pro ego sum diabolus, pro ego sum nex.

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So it was double-billed with Airport, a movie dealing with life-threatening disasters and adulterous affairs. I think that was no less family-oriented than The Andromeda Strain. I guess back in those days they expected families to be able to handle more mature subject matter.

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I think the style of the movie was very cold and clinical. It was not sensational or provocative.

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Indeed.

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Yeah, people weren't such oversensitive moaners back then like they are now, actively looking for things to loudly take offense to.

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