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LOS ANGELES — The romantic comedy “It’s Complicated” arrived at the multiplex on Friday complete with an R rating, ranking it in the same category as “The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” and “Basic Instinct” in the eyes of the Motion Picture Association of America.
But there is no violence in “It’s Complicated,” and the bedroom scenes are decidedly tame by contemporary standards. Instead, the R rating — which experts say could limit the box-office potential of the Universal Pictures film — comes largely from a sequence in which Steve Martin and Meryl Streep smoke marijuana.
MrVicchio said:Nannies, or people that feel glorifying illegal behavior deserves a mature audience?
I think that you hit the nail on the head about it probably being a liability concern. I've seen people smoking weed (personally I think such people are best pitied and quietly enslaved to low-tech industrial interests,) on television shows and PG movies for years.It's about liability. Movie companies don't want to be sued, and they will. It's the lawsuits that have given parental groups so much power, because of how willy nilly tort laws are. You just know that if it's PG-13 and some kid smokes pot, some parent out there will blame it on the movie and sue.
I do see the contradiction you're talking about though. What's "decent" in movies is wildly varied.
Pot smoking should get the show and R rating. I don't think that smoking pot should be peddled to a minor audience so they'll see it going on and think it's cool.
I do think it's odd how it seems that violence is acceptable to show to teenagers in america, but sex and drug use are not. We do have rather odd ideas about what is 'okay'.
I do think it's odd how it seems that violence is acceptable to show to teenagers in america, but sex and drug use are not. We do have rather odd ideas about what is 'okay'.
It's about liability. Movie companies don't want to be sued, and they will. It's the lawsuits that have given parental groups so much power, because of how willy nilly tort laws are. You just know that if it's PG-13 and some kid smokes pot, some parent out there will blame it on the movie and sue.
I do see the contradiction you're talking about though. What's "decent" in movies is wildly varied.
It's about liability. Movie companies don't want to be sued, and they will. It's the lawsuits that have given parental groups so much power, because of how willy nilly tort laws are. You just know that if it's PG-13 and some kid smokes pot, some parent out there will blame it on the movie and sue.
I do see the contradiction you're talking about though. What's "decent" in movies is wildly varied.
Sure, go ahead and try it. You'll get rich. :roll:wow, so if i stabbed someone with a sword, i could then sue everyone involved with lord of the rings?
This is ridiculous...
Yes, folks, the nannies are at it again, trying their hardest to protect Americans from themselves, namely watching a 2 minute scene of 2 people smoking a joint. Yes, teens will not be allowed to see this without an accompanying parent or guardian. It is "bad" for them.
Our nannies will give a PG rating to war movies, in which kajillions of people are killed, westerns, in which people shoot each other up, crime movies, which portray mob killings, bank robberies, hit jobs, cop killings, and the like, and many other movies, in which sex and violence run rampant. But, if a movie portrays someone smoking a joint, it is to be put in the same class as "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre", and "Saw". Marijuana is just that dangerous, they tell us.
Want to know what I would do if my kid were still living at home? If it is a good movie, I would buy the damn thing and let him watch it, if he wanted to. It would be a damn sight healthier than letting him play any of those shoot-em-up video games, complete with bloody carnage, that companies target towards kids.
Is it just me, or is regulation in the name of protection gone rampantly out of control? What kind of dumb asses are putting themselves on pedestals, telling us what is healthy to watch, anyways? I know, I know. They are same the kind of dumb asses who preach that marijuana is bad, but drive home from the bar, after a hard day of regulating others, stoned as hell on alcohol, and think that's OK, until they run some little old lady over. Then that ends up on the news, in technicolor, and guess whose home it gets beamed to? Families with kids, that's who. So what about that joint now?
Hypocrites all. The whole ****ing lot of them!
[/rant]
[/pot stirring]
Discussion?
Article is here.
Nancy Meyers, who directed the film, declined to comment, as did Universal and the film’s producers.
Uh, it's you. It's so plain you're not conservative, why not stop the hackery here?This is ridiculous...
Yes, folks, the nannies are at it again, trying their hardest to protect Americans from themselves, namely watching a 2 minute scene of 2 people smoking a joint. Yes, teens will not be allowed to see this without an accompanying parent or guardian. It is "bad" for them.
Our nannies will give a PG rating to war movies, in which kajillions of people are killed, westerns, in which people shoot each other up, crime movies, which portray mob killings, bank robberies, hit jobs, cop killings, and the like, and many other movies, in which sex and violence run rampant. But, if a movie portrays someone smoking a joint, it is to be put in the same class as "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre", and "Saw". Marijuana is just that dangerous, they tell us.
Want to know what I would do if my kid were still living at home? If it is a good movie, I would buy the damn thing and let him watch it, if he wanted to. It would be a damn sight healthier than letting him play any of those shoot-em-up video games, complete with bloody carnage, that companies target towards kids.
Is it just me, or is regulation in the name of protection gone rampantly out of control? What kind of dumb asses are putting themselves on pedestals, telling us what is healthy to watch, anyways? I know, I know. They are same the kind of dumb asses who preach that marijuana is bad, but drive home from the bar, after a hard day of regulating others, stoned as hell on alcohol, and think that's OK, until they run some little old lady over. Then that ends up on the news, in technicolor, and guess whose home it gets beamed to? Families with kids, that's who. So what about that joint now?
Hypocrites all. The whole ****ing lot of them!
[/rant]
[/pot stirring]
Discussion?
Article is here.
Another domestic issue you're sticky your nose into. You just don't get it do you? You're opinion on our domestic matters means nothing. You don't vote here, and you don't pay taxes here. When you do, let me know and I'll listen.Well that is what happens when you let religion influence the political process. Most ratings were and are some what still inspired by religious dogma of the early 20th century. That is why you can have violent movies pass, but if there is a breast in it, then it is X-rated.
Another domestic issue you're sticky your nose into. You just don't get it do you? You're opinion on our domestic matters means nothing. You don't vote here, and you don't pay taxes here. When you do, let me know and I'll listen.
yeah, 'cause 14 year olds would know where to get it from if they saw it in a movie
I do think it's odd how it seems that violence is acceptable to show to teenagers in america, but sex and drug use are not. We do have rather odd ideas about what is 'okay'.
Nannies, or people that feel glorifying illegal behavior deserves a mature audience?
"We can't risk people making the wrong choice, we must make it for them!"
The call of Liberalism, and slave
It may motivate them to go find it.
It's not ok for my kids.
Well that is what happens when you let religion influence the political process. Most ratings were and are some what still inspired by religious dogma of the early 20th century. That is why you can have violent movies pass, but if there is a breast in it, then it is X-rated.
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