How Isis hijacked pop culture, from Hollywood to video games
by Simon Parkin from Technology | The Guardian on (#128ZW)
Their films use the high-production standards seen in gaming and action movies in their quest to appeal and appal. But they're not the only ones who have had that idea
Related: Media jihad: why Isis's leaders bow to its propagandists
A recent, wearyingly grim clip from Islamic State shows six armed children sweeping a castle in search of bound hostages. One by one, they enter the ruin, their movement tracked by multiple cameras. When, at last, each boy finds a target, cringing in the shadows, he lines up a shot and, following a theatrical pause, squeezes the trigger. The footage invites many questions. Who are these children? Who are the men they kill? What perverted doctrine could ever defend such cruelty? How large was the production team?
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