I certainly don't enjoy watching someone be raped, but I love the movie "The Accused", in part because the rape provides some thought provoking commentary on victims rights and provides me insights on what rape victims go through that I wouldn't have realized without the movie. I can watch the movie and the rape scenes because I know Jodie Foster is acting and doing this voluntarily -- she was not actually physically raped in making the movie.
So yes, it does a make a difference if the animal was physically abused for real. If I know the abuse scenes were simulated and the donkey was not actually harmed in making the picture, I can comfortably watch the movie and try to interpret what it is that the director is trying to convey about the abuse. That hardly means I enjoy watching the abuse or that I somehow approve of it. On the other hand, if the physical abuse was real and intentional to the donkey (or to the girl for that matter), then it's hardly a movie I can endorse or would watch again, regardless of how moving and/or meaningful the movie may be -- in this case the end does not justify the means,
And I disagree with the poster who indicated that if there was abuse, it already happened and watching or not watching the movie won't change that. That is certainly true, but not supporting a movie for moral or ethical reasons, when enough people do it, can certainly send a message to the next film maker trying to decide how to film a similar scenario.
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