Check Kevin Spacey isn't in it: Problems of modern films you'd never have expected

ONCE upon a time you watched a film, enjoyed it or not and that was it. Now you have to avoid sex predators and try to ignore screaming identity politics rows. Here’s what you did not expect.

You must not watch sex criminals

You won’t be rewatching American Beauty any time soon, and there are plenty more Hollywood accusations in the pipeline. In principle we should also avoid everything by Harvey Weinstein’s Miramax, but that would mean boycotting films like Reservoir Dogs, Apocalypse Now and Trainspotting, so everyone quietly ignores that. Thank God people are disgusting hypocrites.

Your favourite films come with a vitriolic transgender controversy

Once it was adult fare like Straw Dogs that was controversial. Now it’s films about a f**king boy wizard going to a magical boarding school. Somehow it removes some of the enchantment when you make the mental connections between Hogwarts, people screaming about having a uterus and Graham Linehan manically posting pictures of trans sex offenders online. 

Storylines have gone to shit

Films used to have fairly clear goals for characters, and a resolution. Then someone realised: ‘F**k that, let’s just have a horrible mess of unanswered questions.’ That person was probably JJ Abrams, during the making of Lost. Stick your Smoke Monster up your arse, JJ.

Wokeness

Hollywood likes to crow about its latest triumph of woke, usually the highly original idea of having a Strong Female Character in a film that turns out to be Not Very Good. Then the fans react as if Brie Larson or Daisy Ridley had personally strangled their dog. This didn’t happen with Superman in 1978. Although in fairness they didn’t team him up with a race-swapped gender-fluid Lois Lane who’s better at everything than the actual main character. 

You have to do homework on massive franchises

It really helps if you know some background to Hulk, Captain Marvel or Jean Grey, because their significance certainly isn’t in the f**king films. The Force Awakens refuses to explain even its basic premise, so you need to google the crappy books and comics. Even Fast Z or whatever it is now requires some basic research into who the car people are. Sadly, after hours of nerdy swotting up on the vast, inconsequential Marvel universe, you discover it doesn’t matter a shit who Falcon is, except maybe to the actor who plays him and his mum.

Everyone’s so very old

No one minds an older actor bowing out with younger actors providing the action and sex appeal, but films are starting to resemble a sci-fi dystopia where no one dies anymore and the youngest human alive is 85. And, if the dialogue in The Expendables is anything to go by, there still isn’t a cure for senile dementia.

All creative works have been strip-mined

A gamer blasting the f**k out of things in Resident Evil in 1996 would not have predicted this limited content would be the basis of seven – yes, seven – films. Basically it’s Hollywood’s fear of making something that hasn’t already proved popular, and you can’t even make a lame joke like ‘What’s next, a big-budget version of Fred the Homepride flour man?’ without someone informing you Netflix has just bought the rights.

Captain Tom's generation were proud to make sacrifices so we could have luxury pools

CAPTAIN Tom’s daughter has confirmed that veterans like him fought in World War 2 so future generations could have a luxury spa and swimming pool complex.

Hannah Ingram-Moore revealed that the Greatest Generation had fought the tyranny of fascism not for freedom, but for 20ft pool houses with changing rooms, toilets and showers.

Historian Oliver O’Connor said: “It turns out we’ve been wrong about the motivation of those who made huge sacrifices during the war. 

“It wasn’t about securing the future of democracy, it was about securing the future of adding expensive annexes to multi-million-pound homes. 

“Not many people realise this, but Winston Churchill was primarily driven by his desire to own a luxury-size indoor jacuzzi with retractable roof and poolside breakfast bar.

“Brave men and honourable men like Captain Sir Tom Moore would have been thrilled to know their lasting legacy as British heroes is a dodgy charity and some incredibly tacky merchandise.

“Who wouldn’t want their face on a duvet cover or the back of a builder’s van? Or a bong? It’s just so noble and respectful.”

Hannah Ingram-Moore said: “OK, so no swimming pool. How about a Captain Sir Tom Moore patio instead?”