Did they add any material? I wonder if they just didn't bother to send it to the MPAA and wait for their review, so it technically would be considered unrated.This may have been discussed before, but why is the theatrical version listed as "unrated?"It should be the exact same cut of the movie that officially received the G rating from the MPAA ratings board of that time.
When TMP was submitted for a new rating for "The Director's Edition" it superseded the previous rating. It looks like Paramount has not re-submitted the theatrical cut, so it and the SLV (which may never have been submitted) are now unrated.This may have been discussed before, but why is the theatrical version listed as "unrated?"It should be the exact same cut of the movie that officially received the G rating from the MPAA ratings board of that time.
Unrated can go either way, depending on the reason. Unrated can mean too mature for general audiences (NR) and they wanted to avoid an X, or just "not submitted." The transporter accident isn't a "G" in my mind, but barely a PG. It's only grisly in its implications, not depiction.That’s interesting! And appropriate—there’s no way in heck that grisly transporter accident is “U”. It’s still one of the most disturbing, unsettling moments in the history of the franchise.
In the UK the "U" is a specific certification that means "Universal," suitable for all audiences, not the same as not receiving a rating at all in the US.Unrated can go either way, depending on the reason. Unrated can mean too mature for general audiences (NR) and they wanted to avoid an X, or just "not submitted." The transporter accident isn't a "G" in my mind, but barely a PG. It's only grisly in its implications, not depiction.
The original Planet of the Apes movies are far more disturbing and all but one got a G rating. Funny how standards changed over time.
The Transporter Scene alone deserves an R.
In the UK the "U" is a specific certification that means "Universal," suitable for all audiences, not the same as not receiving a rating at all in the US.
Kor
Agree to disagree about the transporter. TWOK absolutely R for the eel. Just disgusting, disturbing, and creepy. Not something I want to watch at all.Naaah, nowhere near an R. Hell, TWOK's eel scenes are more R worthy. That's a PG-13 movie if there ever was one.
I'm not asking to be argumentative, but I'm just curious what makes that scene R rated to you? Especially when you consider movies of the era like Alien, Halloween, Friday the 13th, Galaxy of Terror and so on we're all rated R and absolutely appropriately so. I feel the transporter scene is tame by comparison.Agree to disagree about the transporter. TWOK absolutely R for the eel. Just disgusting, disturbing, and creepy. Not something I want to watch at all.
I don't compare against other films. The scene is disturbing, scream and all. It could be like Alien where you don't see the horror but you hear it. Maybe that's just me and I detest horror in most forms so I'm definitely more sensitive to it than most. But, as a scene, nope. Get that garbage out of Trek.I'm not asking to be argumentative, but I'm just curious what makes that scene R rated to you? Especially when you consider movies of the era like Alien, Halloween, Friday the 13th, Galaxy of Terror and so on we're all rated R and absolutely appropriately so. I feel the transporter scene is tame by comparison.
You can see the history of the age certifications that different releases of TMP have received in the UK here on the BBFC site: https://www.bbfc.co.uk/release/star-trek-the-motion-picture-q29sbgvjdglvbjpwwc0yotc1nta
Apparently for the 1979 release it originally received the "U." And then home releases continued to be certified "U" up to 2009.
I’ll be interested to see what happens when I redeem my 4K digital version tomorrow. I had the SD version of the 2001 DC and it of course is now the 2022 version. But in SD. Will it override my theatrical cut or not? I imagine not. Just curious.
To clarify, I’m talking about what’s being sold in the iTunes Store. If you wanted to buy just the theatrical cut, your only choice is to buy the DE so you can get the TE as a bonus feature.Old copies don't seem to have been upgraded, though. My digital copy of the TE from the 4-movie is still as it was.
I wonder if they never resubmitted it because nowadays a "G" rating is considered something for preschoolers, so "unrated" has better marketing cachet.When TMP was submitted for a new rating for "The Director's Edition" it superseded the previous rating. It looks like Paramount has not re-submitted the theatrical cut, so it and the SLV (which may never have been submitted) are now unrated.
Back when the DE came out, it was stated that the intent was that it was the final cut of the movie, and the theatrical edition/SLV would never be put up for sale again. It was a bit of an accident that the TE ended up being the only one available in high definition and went to being the de facto "normal" version of the film for so long.I wonder if they never resubmitted it because nowadays a "G" rating is considered something for preschoolers, so "unrated" has better marketing cachet.
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