Fox has recently found success with R rated comic book movies like Logan and Deadpool, so that got me wondering, should Paramount make an R rated Star Trek film?
No. Why intentionally limit your audience?should Paramount make an R rated Star Trek film?
Would (to me) depend on why it was a R, as opposed to a PG-13.
Up the violence? All three of the Abram-universe movies has shown people being blown into space to their obvious deaths, the transport accident in TMP still frightens me. Implied violence is common in Trek movies. Upping this to the point of spraying blood and acts of sadism I feel is un-neceassay. Cutting Geordi's torture scene in GEN (imo) was the right decision.
Up the nudity? Carol posing in her PG-13 knickers was absurd, the cat sisters in bed with Kirk felt more natural and it fit the nuKirk character. Having the sisters be topless, or they (and Kirk?) be fully nude might have been interesting. But would Chris Pine have agreed to the latter?
Up the sex? Having Spock and Uhura engaging in overt sexual activity would add what to the plot? Or would it be just something to add to the trailer like Uhura pulling her top off in ST'09? Zoe Saldana has appear nude before and might not have a problem with doing so in a Trek movie.
Depictions of hard drug use. If I knew ahead of time that the hero characters were going to be doing this, would be reason in itself for me to skip the movie. Drug use by the movies bad guys (or just background characters) could be different.
Up the harsh language? Some language (in America) brings a quick R rating, other words it depends on how they're being used. I associate some words with a lack of class, I want Starfleet to have some class.
It wasn't what was shown, it was the sound of that scream.The transporter accident in TMP was quite disturbing for how little was shown
It wasn't what was shown, it was the sound of that scream.
Nice Fly reference!It was the 'what we got back didn't live long' that always stuck with me. Brundlefly shit!
There's no need, unless it's to show some seriously nasty rebooted Borg.
Hitchcock himself said he could never put on film anything as scary as a viewers imagination could come up with.It wasn't what was shown, it was the sound of that scream.
The censors only care about American slang.However I do love how O'Brien's shout of "bollocks" somehow got past American censors (and was somehow rated PG in the UK).
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