Tag Archive: paedophiles


THE POPE AND CHILD ABUSE

There are some books that should come with health warnings and  The Case of the Pope by Geoffrey Robertson QC is one of them. Reading it will make your blood pressure rise and fuel an uncontrollable  rage towards the Catholic Church in general and the current Pope in particular.

Of course, you may not feel the same way about this.

For example, if you think that ordaining women priests is as serious as sodomising a child you’ll have no problem with the Vatican’s policy towards victims of child abuse. Also you won’t feel so enraged as I did if you consider that molesting minors is a sin on a par with masturbation. You will be able to argue calmly that, after all, both breach the Catholic rule that stipulates the “non use of the sexual faculty” .

So, perhaps it would be more accurate to say that a health warning needs to be directed at readers with hearts, minds and souls, and at those who place common sense above religious dogma.

This would alert those (surely the vast majority)  who believe that abusing a child is not only a sin, but also a criminal act and one which demands not only that the perpetrators be brought to justice but also that  the victims  be properly recompensed.

And if you are hoodwinked by Pope Benedict XVI’s recent public apology on behalf of priests under his charge  then Robertson’s book is essential reading. Continue reading

HARD CANDY (the movie)

The advantage of anonymity in Internet chat rooms has, as any concerned parent will tell you, a downside, There may be relatively few incidents of paedophile stalkers on message boards but any that crop up get a high media profile. The risk for a film maker is to add to this flame fanning and raise the fear factor up a notch.

David Slade’s first feature puts a twist on the tale to guarantee word of mouth endorsements or misgivings – either way it becomes a movie to see to make up your own mind about (or if you’re lazy you could just read a synopsis on Wikipedia).

The extensive use of close ups, jump cuts and unusual camera angles have a deliberately disorientating effect – adding to the ambiguity of the character’s motives. Ellen Page as the 14 year old Hayley Stark is an impressive discovery – you’re left wondering if she is rebellious and daring or repellent and insane.

Slade is obviously a bold new talent too but I strongly suspect that here he is merely taking the low common denominator of sensationalism to make a name for himself.

The story makes for a gripping drama but it left me feeling that the movie exploits the grey areas of a topical issue for manipulative ends rather than to pose any serious moral questions and in this respect must go down as a missed opportunity.