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The MPAA film rating system is a system used in the United States which attempts to rate a movie based on its
content, helping patrons decide which movies may be appropriate for children of different ages. It was created and regulated by
the Motion Picture
Association of America (MPAA). Other countries use their own motion picture rating systems.
History
The MPAA film rating system was instituted in November 1968 as an alternative to federal
regulation of motion picture content by the United
States government. The United States came rather late to motion
picture rating, as many other countries had used rating systems for decades.
After the Production Code approval system was abandoned in the
1950s, movies had become more explicit in their portrayal of "realism." The realism
movement had its advantages and disadvantages: while it allowed for movies like Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho (1960) to be filmed, it also sparked a rise in low-budget exploitation movies that became more and more explicit in their sexual and violent content. In 1967, two movies were released containing the word "fuck" in
their dialogue (Ulysses and I'll Never Forget What's His
Name), and this was seen as the impetus for a form of regulation to be instituted. After a series of meetings with
government representatives, the Motion Picture Association of America and National Association of Theatre
Owners agreed to implement a uniform ratings system for all of its movies, a system that would be enforced by distributors
and exhibitors (including movie theaters).
The rating system, legally, is entirely voluntary; however, few mainstream producers outside the pornography niche decline to submit to the rating system due to potential effects on revenues (see NC-17,
below), so the system has a de facto compulsory status in the industry.
Some foreign films do not bother to submit to the rating system, reasoning that they will not be distributed widely beyond
their art-house audience, so the cost and expense are unnecessary.
When the DVD home video format became popular, many film producers started translating
some of their "R" rated movies to DVD with extra outtakes included which were never rated by the MPAA, and then attempted to use
this as a marketing angle. For example, the DVD of American Pie exclaims on the box, "UNRATED! The Version You Couldn't See In Theaters"..
The Rating Process
While the MPAA does not publish an official list of what exact words, actions, and exposed body parts are used to determine a
movie's rating, some details have nonetheless been made available, including that if a film uses "one of the harsher
sexually-derived words" once, it remains eligible for a PG-13 rating, provided that the word is not used "in a sexual context"
(that is to say, it is used as an "expletive" instead), and an R rating if these words are used more than once, or once if in a
sexual context. Any drug reference gets a movie a PG-13 at least (with a "graphic" or "explicit" drug scene earning a film an R),
and while total female nudity is permitted in an R-rated movie, any display of naked male genitalia will result in an automatic
NC-17 rating. Members of the MPAA's Rating Board view the movie, discuss it, and vote on the film's rating. If the movie's
producer is unhappy with this rating, he can re-edit the film and re-submit it, or can appeal to an Appeals Board. Movie
publishers generally specify the desired MPAA rating in their contract with the movie producer, so it is common to hear of
producers re-editing in order to achieve the desired rating, by trimming several seconds of the film footage in question.
Original Ratings
The original movie ratings consisted of:
- Rated G – Suggested For GENERAL Audiences (including children).
- Rated M – Suggested For MATURE Audiences - Parental Discretion Advised.
- Rated R – RESTRICTED: Children under 17 (originally 16) not admitted unless accompanied by a parent or
adult guardian (i.e., supervised by an adult; some theater chains specifically stated that the "adult guardian" must be at least
21).
- Rated X – Children Under 17 Not Admitted. (The notation
"Age limit may vary in certain areas" was sometimes added).
Current MPAA Ratings
The current MPAA movie ratings consist of:
- Rated G – GENERAL AUDIENCES: All ages admitted.
- Rated PG – PARENTAL GUIDANCE SUGGESTED: Some material may not be suitable for children (originally,
"some material may not be suitable for pre-teenagers;" wording was changed when the PG-13 rating was introduced in 1984).
- Rated PG-13 – PARENTS STRONGLY CAUTIONED: Some material may be inappropriate for children under
13.
- Rated R – RESTRICTED: Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian.
- Rated NC-17 – No one 17 and under admitted.
If a film was never submitted for a rating, the label "NR" would often appear in newspapers etc.; however "NR" is not an
official MPAA classification.
Effects of Ratings
One of the unintended side effects of the rating system is that the G rating has been associated with children's films and is
widely considered to be commercially bad for films targeted at adults. In a number of cases (such as the movie Sneakers) directors have
intentionally added profanity in order to avoid the G rating.
Confusion (many parents thought films rated "M" contained more adult content than those that were rated "R") led to the
replacement of the M with the GP rating (General audiences or "general public" - Parental guidance suggested) in
1969. This was later (1970) changed to
PG (Parental Guidance suggested), but some films in 1971 were given the GP
rating (i.e., Night of Dark Shadows,
The Abominable Dr. Phibes). During this
transition period some, but not all, GP-rated films also carried a warning that the film "contains material which may not be
suited for pre-teens" (one film so tagged was The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight). The age limit was set at 17 for both R
and X films, though children could still be allowed into R-rated films without being accompanied by an adult, since the rating
system is technically voluntary and does not have the force of law behind it (in the early and mid-1970s the East Coast-based
Century theater chain used its own rating system, with only three categories instead of four: For All Ages, For
Mature Audiences and No One Under 17 Admitted, with most - but not all - R-rated films receiving the middle
designation, under which no age limits were enforced).
During the early 1980s, a number of PG-rated movies containing surprisingly violent
content sparked off an overview of the ratings system. Two violent PG-rated movies affiliated with Steven Spielberg—Indiana Jones and the Temple of
Doom and Gremlins—were the catalyst for the MPAA to modify
the ratings system and introduce the PG-13 rating in 1984 (July 1). This rating still allows children under 13 to be admitted without a parent or
guardian, but the rating does note that parents are "strongly cautioned" to be aware of potentially shocking violence or sexual
content.
The first movie to officially be released with a PG-13 rating was 1984's Red Dawn. The new rating also sparked a wave of generally mediocre PG-13 "teen
movies."
Many films which are rated "R" have been targeted at teenage audiences. In 2000, due to
issues raised by United States Senator Joseph Lieberman (Democrat from Connecticut), the National Association of Theater Owners, the major trade association in the U.S.,
claimed it started strict enforcement of ID checks for "R" rated movies.
The X rating was never officially trademarked by the MPAA, and it was usurped by the adult entertainment
industry to the point where an X rating was universally seen as being equated with pornography. Before this occurred, the most
critically acclaimed X-rated movies were Midnight Cowboy
(1969), which won three Academy Awards and was nominated for four more;
and A Clockwork Orange (1971), which was nominated for
four Academy Awards. (Both films were re-rated "R" several years later.) A few movies have been rated X for violence, including
Henry: Portrait of a Serial
Killer (1990). A large number of newspapers and TV stations refused to place any
ads for X-rated movies, a move that guaranteed a kiss of death for any movie labelled with the X rating; with these policies in
mind, in 1979 a compromise was reached with the distributors of George Romero's horror film Dawn Of The Dead, in which
it was agreed that the audience restriction for "X" would be enforced, but the letter "X" itself would not appear in the film's
advertisements or displays, with the following message being substituted: "There is no explicit sex in this picture; however,
there are scenes of violence which may be considered shocking. No one under 17 will be admitted." (The same dispensation was
granted to some later horror films, including Zombie and Day Of The Dead, the latter a follow-up to Dawn Of The Dead and also
directed by Romero).
When a number of filmmakers chose to release their movies without an MPAA rating rather than let them be labelled X, the MPAA
introduced the NC-17 (not for children 17 or under) rating on September 27, 1990 to differentiate MPAA-approved adult-oriented films
from unapproved X-rated movies.
The first movie to be released with an NC-17 rating was Henry and June in 1990. However, several large
newspapers continue to refuse ads for NC-17 movies. While a number of movies have been released with the NC-17 rating, none of
them have been large box-office hits, and NC-17 is still seen in many circles as being a guaranteed money loser. Later NC-17
films include Dice Rules in
1991, Showgirls in 1995, Crash in 1997, and the re-released version of Pink Flamingos
(originally released in 1972), also in 1997.
The 2001 independent film, L.I.E.
challenged its NC-17 rating and waged a publicity campaign against the arbitrary nature of the ratings system. Lot 47, the film's distributor, lost its appeal. With
the recent success of another NC-17 film, The Dreamers, some film
producers and directors hope that the rating may begin to lose some of its stigma and more movie theaters will consider playing
NC-17 films.
Critics of system
The movie rating system has had a number of critics, including Roger
Ebert, who argues that the system places too much emphasis on not showing sex while allowing the portrayal of massive amounts
of gruesome violence. Moreover, he argues that the rating system is geared toward looking at trivial aspects of the movie (such
as the number of times a profane word is used) rather than at the general theme of the movie (for example, does the movie
realistically depict the consequences of sex and violence). He has called for an 'A' rating, to indicate films
high in violence or mature content which should not be marketed to teenagers, but do not have NC-17 levels of sex (or that
rating's cachet).
An alternate rating system is maintained by the (United States)
National Conference of Catholic Bishops' Office For Film And Broadcasting, designed to better address the aforementioned issues.
Under this classification system, a film can be rated A-I (morally unobjectionable for general patronage),
A-II (morally unobjectionable for adults and adolescents), A-III (morally unobjectionable for
adults), L (limited adult audience - films whose problematic content many adults would find troubling) or
O (morally offensive). Prior to 1982, films adjudged "morally offensive"
received either of two ratings, B, which stood for "morally objectionable in part for all," or
C, "condemned," and until November 1, 2003 the L
classification was known as A-IV, which meant "morally unobjectionable for adults, with reservations" and was
given to films which, in the Office's judgment, "while not morally offensive in themselves, require caution and some analysis and
explanation as a protection to the uninformed against wrong interpretations and false conclusions." (Examples of movies which
received the A-IV rating include The Exorcist and Saturday Night Fever, two films whose content was thought to
be widely exaggerated by the mainstream press, perhaps leading to the wrong interpretations and false conclusions cited in the
rating's full description).
See also
External links
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