Anonymous ID: 0d1e3a March 10, 2020, 11:35 p.m. No.8374953   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Is this why the blue smurf Jew memes are going around?

 

Rennes (France) (AFP) - The mayor of a small French town on Tuesday defended hosting a record-breaking gathering of 3,500 people dressed as Smurfs at the weekend, after accusations that the event increased the risks of spreading the coronavirus.

 

"We must not stop living… it was the chance to say that we are alive," mayor Patrick Leclerc of Landerneau in western France told AFP.

 

The gathering came a day before France banned all gatherings of more than 1,000 in a bid to contain the spread of the virus, which has infected 1,412 people and killed 25 in the country.

 

The Smurf rally drew criticism particularly from the media in Italy, which is battling Europe's most intense outbreak, where La Repubblica newspaper described the rally as "potentially a very dangerous viral bomb".

 

Fans of the hit Belgian cartoon about a colony of blue human-like creatures living in houses shaped like mushrooms descended on Saturday on the Breton town to break the world record for a gathering of Smurfs.

 

Leclerc insisted that the revellers, who painted their hands and faces blue and sported white pointy hats, had violated no ban and were a necessary antidote to an "ambient gloom".

 

https://news.yahoo.com/french-mayor-defends-smurf-rally-outcry-over-virus-001955753.html

Anonymous ID: 0d1e3a March 10, 2020, 11:48 p.m. No.8375010   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5025

The Political Satire Hunting Movie, The Hunt is Out This Friday

 

In the new movie “The Hunt,” the blood runs red and blue.

 

The action thriller, a bombastic satire about liberal “elites” making a sport of trying to kill a dozen conservative “deplorables,” attempts to expose how red-state and blue-state Americans have demonized each other. It also calls itself a farce, with violence so extreme it borders on cartoon—like when a character is not only skewered by spikes but blown in half, too.

 

“What if the craziest conspiracy theories that you would think about another group of people were true?” asks director Craig Zobel. “Right now, it feels like what maybe the healthiest thing we could do would be to start to laugh at this stuff a little bit.”

 

The film opens in theaters on Friday. Universal Pictures canceled the original September 2019 debut in the wake of last summer’s mass shootings in Dayton, Ohio, and El Paso, Texas. The film prompted an anti-Hollywood broadside from President Trump, who accused the movie’s creators of trying to create chaos.

 

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Nothing about “The Hunt” has changed since then except the marketing. Instead of a straightforward horror movie, the studio now is pushing it as comic social commentary. Scathing quotes about its divisiveness fill the movie poster—the studio’s signal that the film’s premise is not meant to be taken seriously and viewers should judge the result for themselves.

 

In the film, rich liberals have abducted a group of unsophisticated conservatives who believe in outlandish conspiracy theories and own lots of guns. The hostages are brought to a remote area and given weapons to defend themselves, but most don’t stand a chance.

 

A hostage named Crystal (Betty Gilpin) is smarter than everybody. She takes on the hunt’s ringleader Athena (Hilary Swank), who opposes cultural appropriation and gendered language but is OK with using a high heel to gouge out a stranger’s eyeball.

 

With its culture-war stereotypes, the movie attempts to make fun of everyone, left and right. The only neutral party is a pink pig. Mr. Zobel breaks down a few of his choice takedowns in this edited conversation.

Warning: We’re about to spoil three jokes.

 

Butt of the joke: Blue states

A liberal couple pose as proprietors of a mom-and-pop gas station and store in small-town Arkansas. Certain concession items in the shop are poisoned. The husband grabs a soda from a refrigerated case, momentarily forgetting it might be deadly. His wife screams at him to stop, frantic. He spits out the drink, thinking it must be tainted. “There are 43 grams of sugar in that soda,” she says.

 

Mr. Zobel: “The gas station is where the premise of the movie is in its most sharp relief. In a world where I know what the Hollywood elite would say, I definitely don’t feel worried about the humor that we can aim at ourselves. I wasn’t necessarily holding back in the other direction as much as just not finding that to be really as funny. I have seen enough hillbilly stereotypes. With the elites, there were new jokes there.”

 

Butt of the joke: Blue states

A liberal couple pose as proprietors of a mom-and-pop gas station and store in small-town Arkansas. Certain concession items in the shop are poisoned. The husband grabs a soda from a refrigerated case, momentarily forgetting it might be deadly. His wife screams at him to stop, frantic. He spits out the drink, thinking it must be tainted. “There are 43 grams of sugar in that soda,” she says.

 

Mr. Zobel: “The gas station is where the premise of the movie is in its most sharp relief. In a world where I know what the Hollywood elite would say, I definitely don’t feel worried about the humor that we can aim at ourselves. I wasn’t necessarily holding back in the other direction as much as just not finding that to be really as funny. I have seen enough hillbilly stereotypes. With the elites, there were new jokes there.”

(Making fun of Bloomberg)

 

https://www.wsj.com/articles/its-red-joke-vs-blue-joke-in-the-hunt-11583849971