It Speaks not to Individuals but to Multitudes
These considerations take on greater seriousness from the fact that the cinema speaks
not to individuals but to multitudes, and that it does so in circumstances of time and
place and surroundings which are most apt to arouse unusual enthusiasm for the good as
well as for the bad and to conduce to that collective exaltation which, as experience
teaches us, may assume the most morbid forms.
The motion picture is viewed by people who are seated in a dark theatre and whose
faculties, mental, physical, and often spiritual, are relaxed. One does not need to go far
in search of these theatres: they are close to the home, to the church, and to the school
and they thus bring the cinema into the very centre of popular life.
Moreover, stories and actions are presented, through the cinema, by men and women whose
natural gifts are increased by training and embellished by every known art, in a manner
which may possibly become an additional source of corruption, especially to the young.
Further, the motion picture has enlisted in its service luxurious appointments, pleasing
music, the vigour of realism, every form of whim and fancy. For this very reason, it
attracts and fascinates particularly the young, the adolescent, and even the child. Thus
at the very age when the moral sense is being formed and when the notions and sentiments
of justice and rectitude, of duty and obligation and of ideals of life are being
developed, the motion picture with its direct propaganda assumes a position of commanding
influence.
It is unfortunate that, in the present state of affairs, this influence is frequently
exerted for evil. So much so that when one thinks of the havoc wrought in the souls of
youth and of childhood, of the loss of innocence so often suffered in the motion picture
theatres, there comes to mind the terrible condemnation pronounced by Our Lord upon the
corrupters of little ones: "whosoever shall scandalize one of these little ones
who believe in Me, it were better for him that a millstone be hanged about his neck and
that he be drowned in the depths of the sea".