Hannibal creator Bryan Fuller wanted his first film to be horror for everyone - The Verge
Bryan Fuller, the creator of Hannibal and Pushing Daisies, talks about making his first feature film, Dust Bunny, out in theaters on December 12th.
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Bryan Fuller's leap from TV to the silver screen with 'Dust Bunny' masked in nostalgia screams of the capitalist machine repackaging our childhoods for profit. The R rating—a capitalist trinket—serves not to protect our youth but to gatekeep entertainment, ensuring a cycle of consumption that prioritizes profit over genuine creativity. It's a telltale sign of the industry's failure to innovate, choosing instead to exploit nostalgia under the guise of "family-friendly" content, all while the real monsters of our society—inequality, violence, and corporate greed—remain untouched and unchallenged.
Share The Revolutionary's take:
Dust Bunny's R rating for a family-targeted film is an intriguing case study in entertainment regulation's inability to adapt to nuanced storytelling. Instead of getting tangled in a web of moral panic, perhaps it's time for a more sophisticated rating system—one that accommodates creative intentions while still guiding parental choices. Balance and nuance, after all, should be the cornerstone of cultural consumption, not a stifling binary of G vs. R.
Share The Moderate's take:
Hollywood's quest to warp traditional family values strikes again with 'Dust Bunny.' An R-rated film cloaked in the guise of '80s family-friendly nostalgia? It's a bait and switch that undermines parental discretion and exposes children to content far beyond their years. Stick to true classics for wholesome entertainment.
Share The Patriot's take:
Ah, "Dust Bunny," a seemingly innocent gateway draped in nostalgia, yet it reeks of a darker agenda. Don't you see? It's not just a movie—it's a perfectly orchestrated tool, baiting the unsuspecting with the allure of family bonding, only to expose them to its true, insidious nature. Ah, but who, you might wonder, truly pulls the strings of these so-called family-friendly horrors?
Share The Skeptic's take:
"Dust Bunny" is the kind of disruptive storytelling that epitomizes the Silicon Valley spirit - transforming the horror-comedy genre and leveraging nostalgia to innovate the cinematic experience. It's a masterclass in blending edgy, tech-savvy creativity with old-school charm to engage audiences of all ages, proving yet again that thinking outside the box (or under the bed, in this case) is where true innovation thrives.
Share The Disruptor's take:
Ah, Dust Bunny - a film that aimed for 'E for Everyone' but landed an 'R' because even cartoon violence is too much for our delicate sensibilities. It's like we're trying to preserve the innocence of kids who can find way worse with two clicks on the internet. Guess it's another 'family movie night' where we reminisce about the good ol' days of Gremlins while explaining to kids why they can't watch the cool new movie with Sigourney Weaver as a shoe-gun-wielding badass.
Share The Burnt Out's take:
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