Tallima: Some have intense pornography addictions and sensual scenes can trigger them.
Some people feel ashamed for wanting someone"better" than their spouse and want to not feel that way.
Some people read about how most actresses are pressured into sexualized roles and feel embarrassed or ashamed for having done then.
Some people have spouses, roommates, or other family members who don't want to see certain content
mobutu: Some have intense food/eating addictions ... they see people eating, food, a scene with an ordinary meal etc and their addiction kicks in.
Some are alcoholics or ex-alcoholics and their addiction could kick in when just seeing a simple bar/pub scene or simple glass drinking.
Some have a problem seeing children and families because they tried for years having them with no success.
You know, that sex addiction can kick in just for simply watching the meteo or a show oe whatever presented by a beautiful woman.
etc
etc
etc
So what now, do we stop making movies, shows, games, books, art just because someone somewhere somehow is having a problem with it or parts from it?
IT IS THEIR PROBLEM and when you have a problem you take care of it instead of weeping all over the internet.
Sex scenes generally exist to cause arousal, confusion, disgust, or renewal intimacy. They are a legitimate art form. But they are also nowhere near as inert as a crayon drawing.
[Sarcasm]
Disusing your feelings, even if you can't clearly articulate them, is probably something we should bully someone about. Because, you know, the internet can't possibly listen to someone or show compassion without a picture of a puppy.[/sarcasm]
The OP is complaining for his or her own reasons. But I don't think they are saying you can't go and watch what you want to watch. They are complaining because a story or characters they care about are mixed with an art form or (more likely, from the context), the presentation of an art form that degrades their experience.
Consider this: Jar-Jar Binks. People complained about his presentation but nowhere did I see anybody saying something like this:
"Oh you Americans! You just can't stand CGI. You're just a bunch of puppetry purists. You know there's violence in film. You people just love to show your children the most violent shows but an ounce of CGI comes in the screen and you bitch and moan about it all over the Internet. Get a life. CGI is a valid art form and we're not going to take it away to please you purists. Get a life. Besides, it's your problem that the character annoys you. Just don't watch the movie."
But of course, they're invested in the characters. They want to see the show. And they don't despise all CGI, they just don't want it overdone and they want to publicly state it.
The fact that nobody goes bonkers and makes all of the logical fallacies in an attempt to poorly defend JarJar betrays your conscience. You know, as does everyone else in this thread, that there is a very significant difference between JarJar and sex on the screen. Sex is a very powerful human experience that makes tons of people feel many different things.
And complaining about it adds to a collective conscience about it, even if it is a shallow form of communication.
Customers complained about the sex cards and CDPR admitted that it was immature and made sex more meaningful in 2 and 3. Others complained about films and companies like VidAngel are formed (which, incidentally, also has a JarJar filter).
Sometimes people can't articulate much more than a complaint because they get stuck in that peculiar place of loving and hating something. They just hate a part and love another. It seems odd to me that a group of regulars here would gang up and attack him instead of say "I rather enjoyed the sex," or "it didn't seem to fit with some of the scenes, but overall, it was fine." Instead, it was more of a critique on anyone's ability to critique sex scenes, which treats it less as an art form.
I do understand some saw an attack from OP using the word smut. But given the definition: "obscene or lascivious talk, writing, or pictures." The OP was just trying to express themselves.
Nonetheless, my call is a call for civility. Every time someone complains about sex, it's always an attack. Showing understanding and reflecting on the critique would be more valuable conversation. "what didn't you like?" Might come back with"it didn't add emotional impact. It felt inserted like it didn't belong." "Oh, it belonged. It was trying to show you how the Witcher perceives women." Or something like that (which many posters did engage in, but some just attacked the poster and not their ideas with "oh you Americans" (it's an American made show, which is a weird attack) and"what a Puritan" (these aren't direct quotes).
I think what needs said has been said. If a call for civility and understanding is outside if your comfort zone, that's your prerogative. I'm all done with the topic. I can't imagine there are too many other arguments to be made about it.