Post-thruth in Show Business


The word post-truth means that circumstances in which objective facts are less influential in shaping public opinion than appeals to personal emotion and belief.
Can you find any cases of "post-truth" in Show Business?
Yes, you can find a case of post-truth in show business. Let's start by asking a question: Has a film ever fundamentally changed the way you think? Of course, people changed the way they think just to live is the written life of a Hollywood film but reality is another and that has a post-truth name. That's why movies are typically fiction stories. Even movies that are based on real facts are fictitious because you add a degree of entertainment or a dramatic touch. Cinema involves a bit of fantasy.
Screenwriters write what you want to watch. A filmmaker is going to devote the time, money and soul needed to tell a story in cinematic form, he'd better form his vision around aspects of the human experience that he knows well. We don't want to see films without conflicts or characters we can identify with.
That's demonstrable. You may not have fought wars in space, but you can identify with the pressures of being at the height of a path already traced. But you probably haven't fought the mutant hunters with your claws, but you do understand the feeling of seeing your old friends disappear from your life as you fight for purpose. You have definitely not had tense conversations with self-conscious artificial intelligence, but you may have questioned what it means to be human.
The point is that regardless of whether filmmakers are expressly trying to make a point of view or not, the cinematic narrative echoes the human experience, no matter how "fake" the outside narrative. The movies also hide: Truth Behind the Scenes and The Cinematic Commission 
Examples of films: Arrival, Big Fish, Calvary, Boys Don't Cry

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