Film Violence Resolution Approved
By MARTHA BELLISLE - AP
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Fearing that lawmakers who blame Hollywood for recent acts of
youth violence will strangle filmmakers' freedom, the Directors Guild of America voted
Saturday to lobby against legislative restrictions and provide legal help to directors who
become targets of ``government intrusion.''
The 21-member national board of directors unanimously approved a resolution that
also calls for establishing a task force of leading directors to ``explore and research
the issue of violence.'' The task force would devise methods to educate guild
members, the ``creative community'' and the public on violence and the ``rights and
responsibilities of Hollywood,'' the resolution said. ``Our mission is both to
ensure that the First Amendment rights of our members are not trampled upon by overzealous
legislators and also to raise the consciousness level of the entertainment community with
regard to the social responsibility of filmmakers,'' DGA President Jack Shea said in a
statement.
The guild represents about 11,000 film and television directors and assistants
across the country.
Since the April 20 high school massacre at Littleton, Colo., President Clinton
and Congress have taken Hollywood to task, suggesting the industry has contributed to a
culture of violence through bloody images. The Senate authorized an investigation into the
marketing of violent games and shows to children and a federal study into the
psychological effects on youths of violent video games and music.
It also passed a requirement that government agencies consider a show's violence
level before granting a permit to film on federal property.
Shea has said the First Amendment rights of filmmakers are as threatened now as
during the 1950s era of anti-Communist blacklisting.
The DGA resolution states that ``the issue of the portrayal of violence in
motion pictures and television should be decided between filmmakers and their audience,''
and that guild directors who are subpoenaed by government agencies will receive guild
support and legal representation.
Filmmakers must be protected from ``unwarranted and unconstitutional government
intrusion,'' the resolution states.
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