TEENS
		
		Wristcutters: No Laughing   Matter
		
		Courtesy of BreakPoint Online 
                 
            with Charles Colson
		
		 
		 
              CBN.com  
                A few months ago on   "BreakPoint," Chuck Colson talked about the movie Wristcutters: A Love   Story and its controversial ad campaign. That campaign,   targeted at older teens and young adults, showed people committing suicide in   various ways. The campaign alone was disturbing enough to draw the ire of mental   health organizations and psychiatrists. But as Chuck said at the time, it is the   film itself that is really troublesome. It is a dark comedy that follows the   adventures of a group of people who have killed   themselves. 
              All of that happened   while Wristcutters was still a   little-known independent film playing at film festivals. Now it is beginning to   open in theaters. Although it opened only in three locations on the weekend of   October 19, Wristcutters did well with   critics and earned a high per-screen average. It went into wide release in early   November. 
              As we said, the   target audience for this film is young people. The film Web site Cinematical asks, "Is   'Wristcutters' the Next Teen Cult Flick?" The site reports, "It's even got a   following already, according to Courtney Solomon, the head of After Dark films.   . . . He says: 'People do actually quote the lines, and it's gotten such an   underground following just from doing the festival circuit.'" So while the movie   may not be destined for mainstream success, Wristcutters is still poised   to have an impact on the very age group most vulnerable to its nihilistic   worldview. 
              To recap briefly, Wristcutters begins with a   young man killing himself in his bathroom, and then moves to a purgatory-like   place where he and others who killed themselves go through the motions of a   meaningless existence. We see flashbacks to many of these people's suicides. The   story revolves around the protagonist's effort to find an old flame who also   committed suicide, only to fall for another girl   instead. 
              As you have probably   figured out, there is a lot missing from this afterlife: for instance, any sort   of divine presence or any sort of grappling with spiritual themes. The   connections between human beings are the main focus and the only real topic of   interest to anyone. Any figures meant to represent divinity or transcendence   turn out to be phonies or arbitrary-minded bureaucrats, and most things they do   end in disaster. The ending tries to lighten the mood a little, but its version   of the triumph of human love comes off as not much more than a fluke, and it   does not do much to dispel the darkness that came before   it. 
              I am not saying that   films should not deal with controversial subjects. Many of the best films ever   made have done just that. But the way in which they tackle these issues is   important, especially when they are trying to target a younger audience. Wristcutters obviously is   not telling kids and young adults to go out and kill themselves. But what the Village   Voice called its "uneasy mix of gallows humor and   irrational optimism" is, at best, an irresponsible way to tell a story about   suicide to teenagers. 
              The makers of Wristcutters may be hoping   for cult success with teens, but let's hope that parents won't let it happen. We   need to counter the appeal of Wristcutters by talking with   our kids and making sure they understand that suicide and its aftermath are no   laughing   matter. 
               
              From BreakPoint, Copyright  2007 Prison Fellowship 
                Ministries. "BreakPoint 
                  with Chuck Colson" is a radio ministry of 
                    Prison Fellowship Ministries. Reprinted with permission of Prison 
                    Fellowship, P.O. Box 17500, Washington, DC, 20041-0500." 
                    Heard on more than 1000 radio stations nationwide. For more information 
                    on the ministry of Chuck Colson and Prison Fellowship visit their 
                    web site at http://www.breakpoint.org. 
               
              This commentary was delivered by PFM President Mark   Earley. 
               
              
              
          
		  
 
 
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