(Of course, if anti-smoking lobbyists had their way, TCOFS would be R rated for all the smoking in the movie.)
Yeah. Sure.![]()
At one point, some anti-smoking lobbyists were pushing for precisely that. They wanted any movie that had smoking in it to get an automatic R rating.
They have also gotten more conservative about language. TMP has both "Damn it, Bones, I NEED you." and "V'Ger's in for one hell of a disappointment." in a G rated film, while films from a decade later and beyond have routinely gotten the PG-13 rating for similar language.
I think the rating system today is generally preferable to that of the '70s and early '80s, PG-13 feels a lot more appropriate for the first two Indiana Jones films, TESB and maybe TWoK. Higher ratings won't stop people from watching the films eventually.
Sure -- it was okay as a "place" name, just not as a swear word. Context matters. There are a lot of words that have an inoffensive literal meaning and a profane slang meaning, and whether you could use them on TV depended on which usage you had in mind. Like "ass" meaning a donkey or a fool versus "ass" meaning buttocks.
Which sometimes allowed TV writers to slip some major innuendoes past the censors, like in the Batman episode where Catwoman tells her henchman to "brush my pussywillows."
Yeah, yeah, yeah. I knew Red Dawn had something to do with it, but I got it backwards. Sue me.This is correct. It was Gremlins and Temple of Doom, especially the removing the heart scene, that were the main reasons for PG 13 being created.
Red Dawn was one of the first films to RECEIVE it after it was created. It wasn't a reason for it being created.
Just because I don't come here with all my reference material stacked beside me all the time doesn't make me an idiot, you know. Someone here complained that they don't trust people that rely on their memory. I don't trust people that don't. Memory is how we got to the point where we could invent written language. Without it, we'd still be naked savages living in caves.
I really don't mean to rant like this, but it gets tiresome to get replies to my posts, from everyone it seems at times, that present themselves as "You posted, therefore you are wrong." I guess today I'm a little testy.
I don't know. That correction didn't seem particularly snarky to me. The other poster just seemed to be trying to clarify a question of fact relating to the issue at hand--rather than trying to "catch" someone in an error.
To my mind, straightening out a misunderstanding or a factual error, in order to dispel future confusion, is not necessarily an attack on the person who was mistaken. It's just keeping the discussion on track and accurate with regards to what's being discussed.
If we're talking about the origins of the PG-13 rating, it's not inappropriate to make sure that we're all on the same page and have our facts straight.
If my memory failed me and I got my facts mixed up (as has been known to happen), I would certainly hope that somebody would correct me--just to clear things up.
Heck, just the other day, on another board, I was talking about the "1964 World's Fair in Seattle." Turns out it was actually 1962. Oops. Thankfully, this got straightened out in no time.
I think we need a completely new rating system. Maybe something like the TV system of content descriptors with L for language, V for violence, etc., but without the preceding overall ratings. Don't try rating films at all, just describe what kind of content is included. And replace the MPAA with a more transparent and representative panel.
It's not "evidence against you," though. You're not the target. As Greg says, it's just an attempt to help you by clarifying some information.
I think the rating system today is generally preferable to that of the '70s and early '80s, PG-13 feels a lot more appropriate for the first two Indiana Jones films, TESB and maybe TWoK. Higher ratings won't stop people from watching the films eventually.
I disagree. I think the ratings system is broken. PG-13 is considered the only profitable rating, so films that should be PG are putting in gratuitous scenes to edge over into PG-13, and films that should be R are toning themselves down to edge down into PG-13, and as a result the PG-13 rating has been stretched so far in both directions that it's become essentially useless as an indicator of content. Basically, every rating other than PG-13 has become so stigmatized as harmful to box-office returns that it stifles creative freedom.
Not to mention that MPAA is this secretive cabal that's very far from being representative of the audience and that makes its decisions for arcane and often arbitrary reasons.
Would "Pussy Galore" get you a PG or a R rating these days?
Would "Pussy Galore" get you a PG or a R rating these days?
The Austin Powers movies were PG-13 and featured characters with names like Ivana Humpalot, Fook Mi, and Fook Yu, so I think PG-13.
I suppose my defensiveness comes from being paranoid. I was bullied incessantly at school growing up, and they would use anything they could think of to try to make me look bad. One kid often went so far as to deliberately mispronounce words around others that I had said, and used, correctly, making it sound as if I had been the one mispronouncing them. Others would try to make it seem as if I knew nothing about things like Star Trek, when usually I was the one that would know, as I was the only admitted fan among my peers. In fact, I have a first edition paperback of Spock Must Die! that I got at the school bake sale and fundraising fair, that a couple of kids spent a day teasing my about "Why must Spock die?" and laughing at me when I tried to answer.It's not "evidence against you," though. You're not the target. As Greg says, it's just an attempt to help you by clarifying some information.
Honestly, it's not even about trying to "help" the person who made the original error. It's just about clarifying matters for the sake of the discussion.
It doesn't matter who made the error or why. It's about facts, not individuals.
Granted, one wants to be tactful about this.
True behind-the-scenes tip: When I'm editing another author's work, one of my cardinal rules of conduct is: "Don't try to be funny."
In my experience, most writers have no sense of humor when it comes to be edited, even if they like clowning around and joshing outside of work. So . . . no sarcasm, no facetiousness, no teasing . . . not when I'm correcting somebody's baby. You want to be Joe Friday, sticking to the facts:
"On p. 35, Anna said she was an only child. On p. 62, she mentions going to her brother's wedding. Please clarify."
Probably not a bad approach to factual matters on the internet as well.![]()
I think the First one isnt as violent as all the others so a G rating was issued instead of PG.... (G - Guidence)gottacook said:Was the G rating for TMP mandated by Paramount before the start of production?
I suppose my defensiveness comes from being paranoid. I was bullied incessantly at school growing up, and they would use anything they could think of to try to make me look bad. One kid often went so far as to deliberately mispronounce words around others that I had said, and used, correctly, making it sound as if I had been the one mispronouncing them.
I think the First one isnt as violent as all the others so a G rating was issued instead of PG.... (G - Guidence)
Airplane! (1980) has bare breasts filling the screen for several seconds and it is also PG.
Neil
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