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View Full Version : So what's the practical difference between NC-17 and R?



Widescreen
8/30/2007, 11:43 AM
According to the MPAA:


An R-rated motion picture, in the view of the Rating Board, contains some adult material. An R-rated motion picture may include adult themes, adult activity, hard language, intense or persistent violence, sexually-oriented nudity, drug abuse or other elements, so that parents are counseled to take this rating very seriously. Children under 17 are not allowed to attend R-rated motion pictures unaccompanied by a parent or adult guardian. Parents are strongly urged to find out more about R-rated motion pictures in determining their suitability for their children. Generally, it is not appropriate for parents to bring their young children with them to R-rated motion pictures.


An NC-17 rated motion picture is one that, in the view of the Rating Board, most parents would consider patently too adult for their children 17 and under. No children will be admitted. NC-17 does not mean “obscene” or “pornographic” in the common or legal meaning of those words, and should not be construed as a negative judgment in any sense. The rating simply signals that the content is appropriate only for an adult audience. An NC-17 rating can be based on violence, sex, aberrational behavior, drug abuse or any other element that most parents would consider too strong and therefore off-limits for viewing by their children.

So it seems like the only real difference is that under-17 kids can't get in even with parents permission. How many parents take their under-17 kids to rated R movies? The media always acts like an NC-17 rating is death for any movie because of lost ticket revenue. Do theaters balk at screening NC-17 movies?

Jimminy Crimson
8/30/2007, 11:48 AM
How many parents take their under-17 kids to rated R movies?

I had a mom and dad with 3 kids sitting in front of me that looked like they were in middle school at the most during Superbad. It was kinda uncomfortable...

skycat
8/30/2007, 11:54 AM
I can't believe how many parents bring little kids into R rated movies.

And yes, a lot of theaters simply won't show NC-17 rated movies.

I_SMELL_FEAR
8/30/2007, 11:54 AM
I saw a show on tv last week about this, and basically yes they do balk at showing them. It used to be that X was basically the new NC-17, and the porn industry ruined the x rating. Back in the day, you could have an X rating for graphic violence, nudity etc but it didnt really mean porn...then Deep Throat came out and that kinda changed things for the X rating...porn took it over and theaters would not show X rated movies because of the association with porn.

After they changed the rating to NC-17, it was like new breath for film makers that wanted to push the envelope more than an R rating, but still not be a porn flick...but then here comes Showgirls, which basically did the same thing to NC-17 as Deep Throat did to X. So now film makers are scared to death of the NC-17 rating, because its basically a death sentence for revenue, because a ton of theaters will not show them now.

Thats what I remember anyway...

sooner_born_1960
8/30/2007, 11:56 AM
Showgirls, huh. I've not heard of that. Is it available in dvd?

King Crimson
8/30/2007, 12:47 PM
nudity and seeing a women naked (which is what "nudity" means) is verboten but a lot of violence and killing is OK.

M
8/30/2007, 12:51 PM
Why does the MPAA hate bewbs? :confused: ;)

rufnek05
8/30/2007, 02:11 PM
nudity and seeing a women naked (which is what "nudity" means) is verboten but a lot of violence and killing is OK.


like lewis black said "no kid has ever had moral, epileptic seizure at the site of a bewb. the only thing that happened was the kid says 'damn, i can't wait to see another one'".

the fun with weapons episode of south park was great at illustrating that point.

rufnek05
8/30/2007, 02:11 PM
Why does the MPAA hate bewbs? :confused: ;)


they hate all things that are right and just in the world.

yermom
8/30/2007, 02:15 PM
I had a mom and dad with 3 kids sitting in front of me that looked like they were in middle school at the most during Superbad. It was kinda uncomfortable...

yeah, there were small kids in Sin City when me and doleo saw it, pretty crazy

SoonerBBall
8/30/2007, 02:28 PM
Go rent "This Film Is Not Yet Rated". It is a very interesting look into the MPAA rating process.