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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

this horror film poster is too scary to be put up in general view on the street?

105 replies

theaub · 03/06/2013 06:39

So as presumably you wouldn't take your preschool age child to see a 15-cert horror film... shouldn't they also be safe being frightened by an image from the film on a massive advert put up in their local street? It's a poster for a violent horror film called 'The Purge'.

The poster is here. ( www.bbfc.co.uk/releases/purge-2013-1) You might not find the grinning skull/mask pic too frightening as a little thumbnail pic but trust me, my husband and I were scared by it when walking past it when blown up to full size on a phone box! Luckily our DD happened to be asleep in the pram at the time. Also the strap line is really scary for kids that are old enough to read: ' for one night, ALL crime is legal'.. or something along those lines.

To me, showing this poster image on the street is valuing the commercial interests of cinemas showing scary films to adults, above the rights of kids (and adults like me who don't watch horror) to use our local streets without being frightened?

That horrible skull mask face is plastered full size all over a phone box on our local main road. its in full view of several bus routes, the ad is in front of residential blocks of flats which line the road, right near our local preschool and en route to the local primary. Lots of kids/people will not be able to avoid seeing it. As it is I will have to take a different route to my local shops to avoid freaking out my kid. I am livid- we have to go out of our way (literally) to avoid this.

I have complained to the Advertising Standards Authority via their website over the weekend, and await their reply. Just feel like ads on phone boxes in particular tend to stay up for months and the harm is being done already. Cant understand whoever passed this one as OK thinking its reasonable in a public environment. I know what is scary is subjective but surely where there is any doubt, protecting kids should come first?

OP posts:
amusedbush · 31/08/2016 13:07

ZOMBIE THREAD

kimann · 31/08/2016 20:56

I quite like the purge films Grin so don't find the poster scary although I know lots of people who find clowns terrifying so can understand.

Now the human centipede poster/film - that is bloody horrifying and I've banned my husband from watching it. I find that poster scary!

OliviaBensonOnAGoodDay · 31/08/2016 21:09

I saw this film last weekend. It's quite scary and in my opinion poses some really interesting questions. Is it just the law that keeps us from killing each other? Or is it something deeper? Innate or taught?

Anyway. I love horror films but appreciate others don't. You shouldn't be forced to look at things that scare you. YANBU. (Although that's probably the tamest image from the film...)

Magicpaintbrush · 31/08/2016 21:40

I completely agree OP!! Posters like this get put up with complete disregard for the fact that they will be seen by young children as well as by their target demographic. There should be stricter rules around what can be allowed to be put up in public places?

I've posted before about similar issues to this myself before (horror films displayed on low down shelves at the supermarket when they could easily be on high up shelves away from the eye level of children) but kind of got the feeling that people didn't seem as bothered as I was by it, and came away wondering if I was being over sensitive. But I'm glad it isn't just me who can see this as the problem it is.

I remember (years ago now) being really horrified by a poster for one of the Saw films going past on a double decker bus up a busy high street - it had a picture of a severed head on a pair of scales. Tell me, how can anyone think something like that is appropriate in a place where children are exposed to it?

I think a lot of problems in this world come from over exposure to violent content. It's not on. Keep that stuff where only adults can see it, and can make up their own minds if they want to see more of it. Not thrust it in the faces of little kids who may be frightened or traumatised by it.

thepenguinsrock · 31/08/2016 21:46

When I was a child a film poster in the local video rental shop for the movie I.T traumatised me for years. Actually it possibly still does a bit 😂
I hate seeing the advertisements for some movies on tv and on bus stops etc for example ones with clowns are just plain scary and I'd rather not see them on my morning school run 😯

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