MPAA Gives Film About Ratings an NC-17 Rating 424
jtcm writes "An original documentary by Kirby Dick, called "This Film is Not Yet Rated" has been assigned an NC-17 rating by the MPAA. The film explores the MPAA's own film rating system and "its profound effect on American culture." The NC-17 rating was given due to "some graphic sexual content" and will likely limit the movie's distribution, as many theater chains will not show NC-17 movies. Among the filmmakers speaking openly in the movie are two of my personal favorites, Kevin Smith and Matt Stone. For those who are eager to view this exposé, fear not. The Independent Film Channel (IFC) will present the film uncensored and uninterrupted."
Gee.. what a shock. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Gee.. what a shock. (Score:5, Interesting)
We'll just have to wait and see what this "explicit sexual content" is and if it's worth such a rating.
Granted, Kevin Smith's "Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back" had to cut a scene with some pretty nasty descriptions of sex out before it could get an R. I don't even think "The Aristocrats" tried to get a rating, and you can't get much more nasty without actually showing the acts.
Re:Gee.. what a shock. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Gee.. what a shock. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Gee.. what a shock. (Score:2)
Re:Gee.. what a shock. (Score:3, Insightful)
But then, a few months later, an unrated directors cut was released, which included and I rented it from a Blockbuster. Jennifer Connolly sharing a double-sided dildo with another girl right there on a Blockbuster-blessed DVD. Go figure.
Swerving back to the main topic...
This jackass could have simply released the film unrated, an
Re:Gee.. what a shock. (Score:5, Insightful)
Blockbuster is a franchise chain, so individual stores may have different policies on what they'll carry. But AFAIK it's not official Blockbuster policy to carry NC-17 or unrated movies -- and if it is, then plenty of stores violate that policy anyway.
The casual movie fan's interest was already lost when the directors decided to make a documentary about the MPAA rating system. The film's target audience was already small before the MPAA slapped a rating on it, and that audience probably won't be deterred by an NC-17 rating. If anything, like the grandparent pointed out, the extra press will only help.Re:Gee.. what a shock. (Score:2)
Young Adam (Sony Pictures Classics) was originally given a NC-17 rating. It was later released as a "R", but I'm not sure what, if anything was cut. I do remember seeing the NC-17 version at a local (mainstream, commercial) movie theater.
Re:Gee.. what a shock. (Score:2)
I call a minor BS (Score:2)
On the other hand, Yes, most movies won't show an NC-17 movie. I used to work for Malco.
Re:I call a minor BS (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Gee.. what a shock. (Score:3, Insightful)
It's a documentary. Do you really think the potential audience was that large in the first place? The people who want to see it will find a place to see it. When it doesn't sell that well, it won't be because it wasn't showing in every theater. It'll be because most people don't want to shell out $10 to see something that doesn't blow up or get them laid afterwards.
Re:Gee.. what a shock. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Gee.. what a shock. (Score:2)
How do you show what content makes a movie NC-17 in the eyes of the rating board without making your movie NC-17? If you don't show clips than the audience can't make an informed decision on whether the ratings board is right, and if you do then your movie will also inevitab
Re:Gee.. what a shock. (Score:2)
If the movie is about the rating system, then chances are it will have to show clips / examples from all of the ratings brackets. So if the film has NC-17 clips, the it would be NC-17 itself.
Personally I don't see that the big deal about the rating is, it'd actually make me more likely to see the film.
I've only actually seen one NC-17 movie, "Kids", and it was excellent. I've only really heard of one other (Showgirls), which I've heard from trusted friends sucked.
Re:Gee.. what a shock. (Score:2)
Instead, the best they can do is get it shown in art-house theaters and a film channel v
May I be the first to say.. (Score:5, Funny)
When? (Score:2)
Re:When? (Score:3, Informative)
premiere at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival and air on IFC in Fall 2006
Article on AICN at http://www.aintitcool.com/display.cgi?id=21980 [aintitcool.com]
LOL, Cinemas not showing a film? (Score:4, Interesting)
What about the adult market? Or is it like pop music now - only good for children? Adults should be working and brainless, good consumers but never exposed to anything that'll make them think...
What do these theaters show after 10pm? Bambi?
Re:LOL, Cinemas not showing a film? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:LOL, Cinemas not showing a film? (Score:2, Insightful)
NC-17 and AO: the scarlet letters of entertainment (Score:2, Interesting)
I remember how the South Park movie originally got an NC-17. Didn't they make fun of the MPAA too? How odd.
Biased? (Score:4, Interesting)
The higher the rating, the less people will be able to see, especially the younger crowd, that is those who have yet to form a complete opinion on Hollywood yet...
Re:Biased? (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously. Come on Slashdotters. I know common sense isn't that common around here but put your fucking tin foil hats down for a second.
Put your tinfoil hats down? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Biased? (Score:2)
Optioned yet? (Score:5, Funny)
Why No -NC-17? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Why No -NC-17? (Score:2)
Re:Why No -NC-17? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Why No -NC-17? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why No -NC-17? (Score:5, Insightful)
Because it's like the old XXX rating. Automatically the NC-17 rating is associated with hardcore porn. Hardcore porn is a big turn off to parents paying for their 15 year old going to the theater. This is a bad business move regardless if the movie is rated NC-17 or unrated due to gore, violence, etc etc...
I recall when NC-17 was being put in place that there was a move to have better definitions of "offensive" content to help the horror industry make films that were a bit more graphic without having them associated with pornography. As we all know, this never happened.
it seems naive to just ban all NC-17 movies blindly. I've never looked up who owns the big chains of theatres, but is it a religiously charged, mid-west family like the Waltons (Walmart)?
Not to be a troll or a flame but you are the naive one here; This has NOTHING to do with religion. It has to do with the profitability of the theater in the face of a fairly common social morality. Sure I can imagine a few bible beaters showing up to protest this at my local theater in a community that has tens of thousands of members but if anything this would help the theater get people interested in this film.
Instead this has to do with "parental concern" not much unlike the advisory warnings on CDs and Tapes (a movement led by a "liberal", I will remind you).
Do you really think a theater owner should show this film knowing that the community isn't going to support this type of film? That's probably your most naive sentiment; theaters and the movies they show are not about art, they're about profit. If you want art for the sake of art on the big screen you're not going to find it at the 18 screen megaplex. Not because it might upset a very small number of religious people, but because it's bad business.
And what if you found out the theater owner was an atheist? how would that effect your unfortunate stereotype of the "religiously charged, mid-west family"? What would you look to next as a crutch for a really lame assumption? There is morality outside of religion. Most of the more "leftist" types I see on slashdot always thinks that moral standards in the community on any level is automatically associated with a religious group. This is absolutely false. Even without religion society will find a common morality and there will still be "oppression" in the name of the public good or in the greatest cry of politicians and prudes everywhere; "What about the children?". Social morality, while it may have been at one point based on religion (as all the major world religions have a few points in common concerning morality) today this morality is based on a sense of purpose and right not based on a religious doctrine but rather an "natural" sense of right and wrong.
Re:Why No -NC-17? (Score:5, Insightful)
Funny, it's usually the right-wingers who insist you can't have morality without religion.
I think the leftist assumption is not that community moral standards arise from religion, but that stupid, allegedly "moral" standards which have nothing to do with actual right or wrong tend to arise from religion -- and in the US, at least, that assumption is usually correct. Believers and unbelievers alike agree that, e.g., murder, rape, and robbery are wrong, because those cause obvious and direct harm to other people. But it's almost universally believers who try to prevent other people from doing things that don't affect the believers' lives in the slightest.
Re:Why No -NC-17? (Score:2)
I've never seen proof of this.
stupid, allegedly "moral" standards which have nothing to do with actual right or wrong tend to arise from religion
Such as?
Re:Why No -NC-17? (Score:5, Insightful)
I've never seen proof of this.
[shrug] I don't know if it's ever been "proved," in the sense of a large-scale study of the correlation between right-wing political beliefs and the belief in religion as the source of morality; I do know that I've seen many, many right-wingers argue this position, and rarely (though not never) seen left-wingers do the same. Actually, that's a study I'd like to see.
> stupid, allegedly "moral" standards which have nothing to do with actual right or wrong tend to arise from religion
Such as?
Such as the idea that there's some inherent danger in mainstream movie theaters showing NC-17 movies.
Also such as: gay people getting married is a threat to straight people's marriages, students should learn creationism in science class, it's an appropriate use of the FBI's time to invesitgate "obscene" material on the internet, et bloody cetera.
Re:Why No -NC-17? (Score:3, Insightful)
No, that's an issue of fuck-buddies taking advantage of loopholes in laws which were written to motivate parents to stay married for the sake of the kids.
It's based on several axioms:
1. All else being equal, a kid is better off being raised by both biological parents.
2. Society wants kids to be well off.
3. Using tax laws and so forth, we can encourage families to stay together.
4. A gay couple, collectively, can never produce
Off-topic: Normativness as 'morality' (Score:3, Interesting)
Oh, come now. This isn't morality; it's prejudice and spite masquerading as morality.
No, definitely not. Not as a generalisation. A kid is better off being raised by happy, low stressed people in a stable relationship. Biological relationship simply does not come in here. It's always been 'a wise child who knows who his father is' - infidelity is a fact of life in all communities and at all periods of history. Kids
Re:Why No -NC-17? (Score:3, Insightful)
For example:
Yep. It's those darn religious conservatives who were responsible for those sort of nanny-state decisions.
</sarcasm>
About the only political party that has any claim on leaving people to make their own decisions are the libertarians. Neither the repubs nor t
Re:Why No -NC-17? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why No -NC-17? (Score:2)
Let me ask you this. You read NC-17 and you say, doesnt sound so bad... but what about when you read "X-Rated". how does that make you feel? Why do I ask? Because NC-17 was a rating that replaced X-Rated. it sounds nicer and non-pornographic. Because, well, X-Rated filmes were not pornoraphic (thats XXX) and the association was getting out of hand. Plus, the X is kind of a bad symbol to have as a marketing tool.
Now, why is it bad for Theaters to
Re:Why No -NC-17? (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, the Xbox, generation-X, X-men, X-games, are all marketing disasters.
There was no XXX rating (Score:5, Informative)
Indiana Jones III in 1984 got a new PG-13 rating to create something that sounded edgier than PG but not quite R, something that older teens could be expected to watch. It featured the scene where the voodoo guy rips out a beating heart from a living person and bites it.
Later, filmmakers asked for a renamed rating for "mature" subjects that were considered "more than R" to disassociate mature with the porn stigma attached to "X Rated"
So to accommodate mature, non porn films, the MPAA re-branded the X rating as NC-17, and some non-porn feature films actually got released as NC-17. Very few "X rated" mainstream films that had ever been released before. The X rating didn't necessarily mean sex and nudity, but in reality it generally did; when people heard X they associated it with hardcore porn. Before NC-17, films getting an X rating that weren't porn simply edited things down to get an R rating.
Porn theaters had long done the opposite: they marketed their content (much of which was not really feature length movies, but just sex, and so not even officially ever "rated") as "Triple XXX!!!" There is no such thing as an XXX rating. There is no such thing as an XXX rating. There is no such thing as an XXX rating. That sink in yet?
Any theater choosing to show NC-17 movies would be risking the taint of being labeled a porn-house, likely incur the wrath and bad publicity of morality/family interest/religious groups, and for all that trouble only show limited run movies with a narrow appeal. How would that be a good business decision?
Theaters already are unlikely to show independent movies without guaranteed draws that deliver profits efficiently. If you are puzzled as to why a theater, and particularly a huge chain designed to make money fastest, would not (or rarely ever) show NC-17 rated films, then you must also be wondering why WalMart doesn't sell latex suits, dildoes and, buttfucking slings.
Re:Why No -NC-17? (Score:5, Insightful)
But a blanket policy against NC-17 movies is different. They do that "for the children". You don't hate children, do you?
Its a lame CYA policy. If they don't show the movies, they won't get complaints and boycotts and other crap. If they proactivelty say they won't show NC-17 movies, that keeps all the radical religious freaks out of their hair.
You know... Kind of like how all those IMAX theaters decided not to show that movie about the ocean since it had the word "evolution" in it.
Re:Why No -NC-17? (Score:5, Funny)
If they won't show NC-17 movies because of worries, then the terrorists have already won.
Re:Why No -NC-17? (Score:3, Insightful)
So fucking what? (Score:4, Insightful)
That's what NC-17 is for.
NEWSFLASH! Producers of anti-MPAA film include racy content with intention to pull an NC-17 rating that causes typical Slashdot readers who never read articles and jump to conclusions to conclude that the MPAA is rating such film inappropriately because of the target of said film and not the adult content. More at 11!
Re:So fucking what? (Score:3, Interesting)
That's what NC-17 is for.
Really? But I've seen some PG-13 movies where people complained that it contained "some graphic sexual content."
There is no definition of what is "sexual" - Is a woman breastfeeding "sexual"? What about just the breast? If she's giving herself a mamogram? If she's showering? If she's playing with it? Where do they draw the line? They don't tell anyone.
There is no definition of "graphic." Does that mean a
Re:So fucking what? (Score:2, Informative)
Does that mean a breast through a frosted glass door of a shower? If that same door was not frosted, but was steamy? How about not steamy and clear? Does the level of zoom matter? What if there was no door? Or does the breast need to be engaged in some activity for it to be "graphic?"
You don't even know what the 'graphic' content is in the movie. Maybe they played a 30 second clip of some random porn film? But who cares. Its just a rating by a private group. Yes, it does mean that most movie theaters will n
Re:So fucking what? (Score:4, Insightful)
King Kong (1933) was SUPER popular and didn't get any Oscar nomination either.
Re:So fucking what? (Score:3, Interesting)
What do I care about that one. I was thinking of a movie that was actually a documentary. "Hoop Dreams." Everyone involved in the process claims they rated it the highest of all films rated, yet it did not get a single nomination. It confused people enough to warrant a lawsuit. There isn't any mystery why Fahrenheit 9/11 got a poor result. It was very contraversial and debatable of whether it is a "pure" documentary.
Re:So fucking what? (Score:2)
Companies are responsible for making sure their films' names are on the eligibility reminder list. Then the communi
Re:So fucking what? (Score:4, Insightful)
Could you point me to a (repeatable, verifiable) scientific study showing that kids are harmed in any way by seeing sexual content on the screen?
What, the land of the free? Oh yeah, you hail aggressive stuff such as alcohol and guns, and ban the laid back stuff like sex and marijuana.
Re:So fucking what? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:So fucking what? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:So fucking what? (Score:2)
Well, that's because if you drink before you are 21, you might, uh, die. Just not for your country.
Anytime after 21, it's perfectly safe...
Re:So fucking what? (Score:2)
Re:So fucking what? (Score:2)
I think "kill for their country" is much more appropriate.
People die all the time, at ages much younger than 18. Whether or not it's "for their country" is just a question of whether the circumstances which lead to their deaths was something considered important to the country.
Re:So fucking what? (Score:2)
It's just retarded puritanism that's all. We are still in the dark ages in so many ways.
Re:So fucking what? (Score:2)
Re:So fucking what? (Score:4, Interesting)
So, of course, they drove off base, got shitfaced, got into accidents, and the whole thing ended up creating enormous amounts of problems that just didn't exist when they could go do their drinking at the NCO club and then stumble home. (And as a medic, working in the base ER, I got to see the results of this up close and personal.) Ditto the situation on college campuses. Treating people like adults with respect to sex, money, and work but like children with respect to alcohol is one of the dumbest ideas society has ever come up with.
Re:So fucking what? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:So fucking what? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:So fucking what? (Score:2)
There was actually an interesting period of time in Japan when bare chested women were racey in urban areas (which were influenced by western models), but not in rural areas. So men would come from rural areas, aftr working with shirtless woman in their homes, and girls with their tops exposed would suddently become this taboo hottness for them.
Re:So fucking what? (Score:2)
Re:So fucking what? (Score:5, Insightful)
And heaven forbid there be a naked penis in a scene! Why, the viewers' sensibilities would run out of the room screaming should that ever happen. Penises are more dangerous and vile than guns you know.
Re:So fucking what? (Score:3, Insightful)
First off, it's not banned, it's limited and it's not by the governement, it's by a third party entity and wise businessmen.
Secondly, let's look at some other titles that would doubtlessly be NC-17 in the US and see how they faired in the more enlighted countries:
Faces of Death from 1978
Certification: New Zealand:(Banned) / Australia:(Banned) / Finland:(Banned) /
Re:So fucking what? (Score:2)
Actually not. It was a blanket replacement for the X rating. The real purpose wasn't just sexual content but all inappropriate content without the X stigma, now we have the NC-17 stigma. It's possible to get an NC-17 for no sexual content or even language, violence and gore is enough. The irony is that's where the argument first got hot. George Romero was known for not submitting his films for rating because several of the Dead films would have gotten X ratings inspite of lacking
Re:So fucking what? (Score:2)
OH NO (Score:4, Funny)
Stuck in paradox! (Score:5, Funny)
Brain...stuck...in...paradox. Must...make joke about Soviet Russian movies rating YOU...to abort...
Re:Stuck in paradox! (Score:2)
a pr for a movie that is airing in fall 2006? (Score:4, Funny)
Ratings (Score:2, Interesting)
Don't show NC-17s? (Score:5, Interesting)
Sortof (Score:5, Informative)
Uc - Universal (children) - Films specifically aimed at pre-school children.
U - Universal - Suitable for all.
PG - Parental Guidance - Might have some themes that might upset some children - but generally fine for all.
12A (cinema)/ 12 (video) - Must be over 12 to watch it.(I think 12 used to be a guide, and then 12A was the legally enforcable one)
15 - Must be over 15
18 - Must be over 18
R18 - Restricted 18 - Can only be purchased from certain outlets - it's porn.
The British system still has the weird bias towards violence over smut - but it's got a lot better over the last few years (BBFC replaced their chair with a slightly more enlightened chap).
A few years back R18 didn't exist - hardcore was either not available, or heavily cut. Nowadays pretty much everything can be released with a few notable exceptions (violence, non-consensual stuff etc).
www.bbfc.co.uk has a nice little breakdown of the above rules. Nice little note on the R18 page "These guidelines make no distinction between heterosexual and homosexual activity."
Good.
Re:Sortof (Score:3, Informative)
No, 12 was not allowed to be seen by under 12s at all, 12A is over 12s or under 12s with a parent. I presume they're now phasing out PG as it's actually a harsher rating than the "higher" 12A (legally, you can't let a 17 year old in to a PG film without a parent), and 12A certainly exists for videos.
Re:Don't show NC-17s? (Score:3, Funny)
Expected? (Score:2)
Movie ratings are a great way to use free market provisions to set rules without force. The theaters aren't required to enforce the ratings guidelines, and my local theater actually regularly disregards them based on the values in my specific community.
The whole ban on NC-17 movies seems pretty ridiculous. Our mall theater follows the ban, but I do recall one or two NC-17 movies in our smaller theater (I can't remember which fil
nc-17 (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:nc-17 (Score:2)
Re:nc-17 (Score:2)
For this we'll be using the movie American Pie. If you've seen it, but not for some time, then perfect. In that case go rent the unrated and the theatrical (R-rated) versions. Watch the unrated version first. See if you can point out, from memory, what is different. My bet? You might get one scene
Last Tango, Midnight Cowboy (Score:3, Interesting)
Midnight Cowboy, as mentioned above, was also originally 'X'. Certainly due to the depiction of homosexual acts.
Today I think both have been re-released as 'R'. Possibly without any changes.
Some theaters won't show NC-17s because ... (Score:4, Informative)
Mmm... press... (Score:4, Insightful)
It's an independently released documentary. For fuck's sake, that pretty much limits its distribution to places that would show it irrespective of its rating already. Hell, the new rating may open its distribution circle to the kinds of theatres Pee-Wee Herman frequents.
Graphic violence (Score:2, Interesting)
I've never actually _been_ to america, so like a lot of europeans, most of what I "know" about america comes from Hollywood: so, americans, what the HELL is really up with you? I can't imagine it's remotely healthy to fill your kids h
Won't Show? (Score:4, Insightful)
Broadly speaking, it seems similar to our 18 cert. In other words, a level of maturity reasonable for an 18 year old is required to see the film.
So why do cinemas in the US have a problem showing material appropriate for everyone from 18-[dead] year olds? Does this not annoy anyone? The ratings system there seems to have been appropriated to decide what should be seen by adults, not what I'd imagine a ratings system's purpose to be: to highlught material which is perhaps not appropriate for minors
Just seems a little horse-before-cart to me. And more than a little Victorian. What I don't understand is why there isn't outrage over this sort of behaviour? Well, perhaps outrage is too strong a word. A broad assumption seems to be that here in Ye Olde Europe, we all live in nanny-states. But perhaps the nanny'ing pressure groups in the US need to be treated to a little more questioning, and perhaps brought down a peg or two.
Re:Won't Show? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Won't Show? (Score:3, Interesting)
NC-17 is an "official" MPAA rating that replaced the "X" rating that was synonymous with "porn" in the US. Supposedly, it would allow erotic "Art Films" so be shown in places (Boston, Kansas, AMC Theaters) that wouldn't go for porn. As I recall, that was the way it was promoted when NC-17 rating was created. In practice, towns, theaters, etc., just viewed NC-17 as another name for "X" and nothi
Re:Won't Show? (Score:3, Interesting)
The link between NC-17 and X, historical or not, is a bit daft, surely?
To my unAmerican ears, it sounds like: "Any other rating, you're safe. NC-17? Well, that just might be PORNOGRAPHY!"
We've got the 18 cert to say "Make Up Your Own Damn Minds. If you're at least this old, you should be big enough and ugly enough to figure out if the film contains material you'd object to." Or, in their own words, "at '18' the BBFC's guideline concerns will not normally override the wish that
Re:Won't Show? (Score:5, Insightful)
If they architecturally design their theatre to have an "over 18" area, then the place will be automatically labeled a porn theatre and nobody will want to bring a date, or their kids there.
Also, america is full of conservative groups that believe every other movie to be directed by satan in order to corrupt our youth. These groups have a lot of power in local politics in most medioum to small cities, so they can easily screw over any theatre that they deem to be pornographic. And for them NC-17 means porn
So the effect is that there onle a few theatres in the biggest cities of america which show nc-17 movies
Re:Won't Show? (Score:3, Funny)
Warning! Your objectivity is showing!
Bourne (Score:2, Interesting)
Oh, I was just listening to "An operator's manual" and there they censored bitch in sonofabitch, which seemed weird, as that is the (collection of words) I've noticed swears have been replaced with in movies, again and again.
I'll blame this all on the victorians [a9.com], becau
Re:Bourne (Score:2)
I don't know if you intended that to be funny, but you're a riot, dude.
And what will I get out of watching this movie? (Score:3, Interesting)
Similar experience in Mexico (Score:3, Interesting)
(Informational Note: "La ley de herodes" is a century-old mexican adult saying. It goes like this: 'O te chingas o te jodes'. A literal translation would be: Either you get f***ed, or you get f***ed. In other words, you're f***ed anyway. But it also could mean "either you bribe, or get f***ed", since the spanish word 'chingar' (which is a bad word, btw) has around 50 different meanings, depending on the context).
Anyway, this "La Ley de Herodes " movie was censored by... guess who? The government. This only caused a political scandal, and the movie became so famous it ended up being shown in theaters anyway.
Something tells me the ratings film's intention was exactly this one - to get censored by the MPAA.
Re:This is sooo last week on digg. (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd rather be a little behind the times in news, if I can get some meaningful comments beyond: "LOLL, the MPAA is so gay!!"
Re:This is sooo last week on digg. (Score:2)
Yeah, here at Slashdot, the veteran readership can stretch "LOLL, the MPAA is so gay!!" out into a paragraph or two and get a Score:5
Those Diggers are such rookies.
Re:This is sooo last week on digg. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What about american TV? (Score:3, Informative)