I've been reading a little on it and I'm not so sure it was cut down to PG-13 or if all the "experts" have assumed it was going for an R. It's a bit vague and confusing reading into it.
Wilhelm Screams are like Stan Lee cameos.First clip from "Venom"
The Wilheim scream just makes it look corny
Wilhelm Screams are like Stan Lee cameos.
I want to believe there might be a good movie in this somewhere but when you cut 40 minutes out of the movie......
https://www.newsarama.com/42061-tom-hardy-s-favorite-scenes-were-cut-from-venom.html
And there was still footage left on the cutting floor after the extended editions (off the top of my head, Eowyn fighting in the Helm's Deep caves and at least two shots seen in the very first trailer).I was about to say the same thing, just look at how much footage the LOTR movies didn't use in the theatrical cuts that went into the extended editions.
Lots of movies cut a comparable amount from their initial rough cuts. It's pretty routine. The way film editing works is that you start off with a cut that includes everything you might use, then you pare it down to the stuff you really need. A lot of what gets cut out is just dead space that slows the timing, redundant exposition and dialogue, stuff that the final film is better off without. But laypeople don't understand how film editing works, so whenever this routine practice happens to get mentioned in the press (as with Star Trek Nemesis and its 50 minutes trimmed from the rough cut), people think something's gone horribly wrong. The same way they think something's gone horribly wrong when they hear a film has gone back for reshoots, even though most films do that these days and it's a normal, expected, pre-planned part of the process.
I thank God this attitude hasn't been directed at books yet.
"Ohmigod, I hear Cox's new book was bounced back to him for revisions. What's worse, this is apparently his third draft and he's just cut out an entire subplot and wrote a new prologue. And changed the gender of one of the supporting characters. It's like it's a work-in-progress or something!"
"Seriously? Jesus, that sounds like a trainwreck . . . ."
Coming back to Hardy's comments, it is a shame that his favorite scenes are cut. Granted, that doesn't necessarily mean anything about the quality of the scenes, but it's clear that Hardy laments their loss and that feels like a significant loss.
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