Friday, June 26, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

Love Trashy Films? You Must Be Smart

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 Oct, 2016 01:40 PM
    Individuals who prefer to watch "bad" or "trashy" movies, typically known as the low-budget films, are smarter, a study has found.
     
    "Trash films" were described as cheaply or poorly made films that feature embarrassing or disturbing content. These low-budget films do not correspond to the mainstream standards and taste.
     
    The study explored how trash films' characteristics support positive use of the label, the researchers said.
     
    The study focuses on how something can be identified as cheap and worthless "trash" and still be embraced and (re)evaluated as providing positive enjoyment, Keyvan Sarkhosh, Film scholar at the Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics in Frankfurt, Germany, was quoted as saying to natureworldnews.com. 
     
    The findings showed that people tend to watch such trashy films because they provide humour as well as entertainment. 
     
    On the other hand, the same group was also found to appreciate art films. 
     
    The enjoyment of watching trash films was found related to an ironic viewing stance.
     
    Viewers attribute to trash films with not just amusing/entertaining qualities, but also a positive, transgressive deviance from the cinematic mainstream, and their appreciation of these films is coupled with marked preferences for art cinema, Sarkhosh said. 
     
    For the study, Sarkhosh conducted an online survey and included 372 participants -- composed of university students and people whose online presence on Facebook and on trashy film-related forums are felt. 
     
    The study showed that an 84 per cent of the fans of trash films had university degrees, which means they were primarily well-educated and were described as "omnivorous" audience.
     
    "Such viewers are interested in a broad spectrum of art and media across the traditional boundaries of high and popular culture," Sarkhosh noted.
     
    The study was published in journal Poetics.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Doggie Darlings On Instagram Can Mean Big Business For Their Owners

    Doggie Darlings On Instagram Can Mean Big Business For Their Owners
    Dean just turned two years old, but he already has more than 107,000 Instagram fans following his squirrel-chasing, stick-fetching and snack-sneaking adventures in Toronto.

    Doggie Darlings On Instagram Can Mean Big Business For Their Owners

    Indian-Origin Physicist Madhu Menon Discovers Material Better Than Graphene

    Indian-Origin Physicist Madhu Menon Discovers Material Better Than Graphene
    An Indian-origin scientist has developed a new one atom-thick flat material that could upstage the wonder material graphene for having properties allowing it to be used in advance digital technology.

    Indian-Origin Physicist Madhu Menon Discovers Material Better Than Graphene

    Women Riders Wanted: Motorcycle Trade Shows Look To Attract New Bikers

    Women Riders Wanted: Motorcycle Trade Shows Look To Attract New Bikers
    Last year, Sylvie Brisebois fulfilled her longtime dream of taking a solo motorcycle ride to California.

    Women Riders Wanted: Motorcycle Trade Shows Look To Attract New Bikers

    In Sweden's 1st Unmanned Food Store, All You Need Is A Phone

    In Sweden's 1st Unmanned Food Store, All You Need Is A Phone
    It was a chaotic, late-night scramble to buy baby food with a screaming toddler in the backseat that gave Robert Ilijason the idea to open Sweden's first unmanned convenience store.

    In Sweden's 1st Unmanned Food Store, All You Need Is A Phone

    5 Facts About Leap Year And Why There Is A Feb. 29 This Year

    5 Facts About Leap Year And Why There Is A Feb. 29 This Year

    TORONTO — Ever wondered why we have leap year? Or exactly what it means for people born on ...

    5 Facts About Leap Year And Why There Is A Feb. 29 This Year

    Leap Year Has A Rich History - In Marriage Proposals

    Leap Year Has A Rich History - In Marriage Proposals
    Here's a look at that magical mark on the calendar as it relates to love and marriage, courtesy of Monmouth University historian Katherine Parkin, who has researched the topic.

    Leap Year Has A Rich History - In Marriage Proposals