Bobtheduck (post: 1326211) wrote:Well, there are always those that you get the impression bribed the ratings board...
Yeah, pretty much.
Bobtheduck (post: 1326211) wrote:Well, there are always those that you get the impression bribed the ratings board...
Etoh*the*Greato (post: 1326218) wrote:In the case of the Dark Knight, there might have been some of that, but Nolan and his crew were really struggling to keep it where it was ratings wise because they knew the movie would be partially dependant on the kid-crowd.
LadyRushia (post: 1326149) wrote:Most times when sexual humor is in a PG-13 movie, I think it's too much for 13-year-olds. Older teens might be better suited to handle it, but not younger ones. It might be a good idea if there was something like PG-15 or 16 since anything PG-13 can either be close to PG or close to R. There seems to be too much of a gap there. I guess the problem would be distinguishing what would make a film PG-15 instead of 13. People would have a wide variety of opinions on that.
Davidizer13 (post: 1326230) wrote:See, that's the disturbing part, in my eyes. A PG-13 movie shouldn't be partially dependent the "kid-crowd" anyway. They should be aiming for the 13-and-up audience instead, because they're rated as such. I really don't care for ads for/ads for toys based on those movies showing up on what are predominantly children-oriented TV networks. I realize that some of this stuff is already planned before the movie is rated, but they still have an idea about what it's going to be rated beforehand and should market accordingly. Just my thoughts about it.
Bobtheduck (post: 1326316) wrote: For similar reasons, I'm really upset about the PG rating for Half Blood prince... If they have the content the story SHOULD have, it SHOULD have gotten a PG-13, but I know Warner is trying to go for a broader audience... Which I don't agree with. *sigh* The Harry Potter books were supposed to grow with their audience, meaning kids shouldn't be watching HBP anyhow.
Either the content is left in, and it was incorrectly rated, or the content was left out and the story was compromised.
Fish and Chips (post: 1326306) wrote:I've always felt parental discretion was just what it said on the side of the tin: discretion. Children don't mature at a uniform age, so it's important that the adults in their lives are responsible enough to understand what they can handle. MPAA ratings are like a field guide, not iron absolutes.
It should probably also be noted that the 13 in PG-13 doesn't suggest that it is acceptable for children over 13, merely that it is likely unacceptable for children under 13. I'm not trying to excuse the trends in hollywood morality, just emphasizing that as a mother or a father, it is important to be active and responsible in your child's growth, and this is part of that.
Kaligraphic (post: 1326454) wrote:I suppose I'm in the minority here, because I disagree with the "shield kids from all this bad stuff that happens in society" mindset. Historically, children tended to become adults around 12-14. They had experience with society and knew how to interact with it, so it wasn't that big of a shock. Now, we insulate from the real world so much that teenagers, seeing a little of reality, tend to get the impression that their parents have no idea what the real world holds. This causes them to disregard their parents' instruction, and is one of the big causes of teenage rebellion.
Do you not teach your child that sex even exists until they graduate from college? They'll have found out from their middle school classmates, and may already have contracted an STD. Do you not admit to the existence of vulgar language? Changes are, it's their primary language when you're not around. Ignoring things doesn't make them go away, it just means that your child will be unprepared when they encounter them in real life. And they need more than just discipline - they need understanding. If you deny the obvious, they'll think you're out of touch with reality, but if you explain both the obvious and the hidden, they may realize that you know something about life.
Overprotectiveness is not love. It is harmful for a child, and it will lead to pain and suffering in that child's life. Of course, that doesn't mean that you should just have kids watch everything unsupervised, but that they should be guided through progressively broader material, and taught what's really going on.
That said, the purpose of the movie ratings is not to do your parenting for you. It's to warn parents that their attention is necessary. PG-13 doesn't mean that any given 13-year-old in the country is ready for a movie. The PG part doesn't stand for "Perfectly Good", it stands for "Parental Guidance". Allowing children to receive their social guidance from movies, without parental input, is negligent parenting. It's an abdication of the parental responsibility to train their offspring for life in the real world.
Shiroi wrote:I do think that if a kid is going to see objectionable content in entertainment, the parents should be there watching it with them so they can explain-- lovingly --what's going on. And parents should know their children well enough to know what's okay for each child and what's not.
Radical Dreamer (post: 1326470) wrote:I honestly don't see what this has to do with not letting a child watch a raunchy PG-13 movie. There's a vast difference between understanding that the world is full of sin and choosing entertainment that glorifies that sort of behavior to a child who may not discern right from wrong at such a young age.
Etoh*the*Greato wrote:In the case of the Dark Knight, there might have been some of that, but Nolan and his crew were really struggling to keep it where it was ratings wise because they knew the movie would be partially dependant on the kid-crowd.
Ante wrote: Take the Dark Crystal. Back in the 80's I believe that earned a PG rating
The problem is that nowadays most children are able to get their hands on said problematic movies/games. How many people under 17 have you heard talking about playing, say, GTA4?
And then there's that "extra" scene someone modded and sent around cyberspace. Hackers, modders and programmers are making a lot of things more than they were originally meant to be.
Originally Quoted by Nate
This is why I hate Michael Bay. This is why I wish he hadn't worked on the sequel, or even the original. People were going to go see Transformers to see, well, TRANSFORMERS. It doesn't need sexual jokes, it doesn't need Megan Fox stripping, it doesn't need ANY of that, it needs robots fighting and that's it. There was zero reason to make it more "mature," the nerd factor and the kid factor was going to be more than enough to make the movie a success. He only did it because he's Michael effin' Bay and that's how he rolls. :|
Another Quote from Nate
The reason it bothers me is because there's no purpose. You want to market toys to kids? Okay, make the movie a bit more kid-friendly. McDonald's actually stopped marketing Happy Meals featuring Batman Returns way back when that movie came out. Why? They said the sex and violence was over the top for kids, and refused to market to them based on that. That's friggin' integrity right there.
RandomBurrito (post: 1326962) wrote:Agreed. Toys shouldn't be marketed for children if the show/movie/game is not made for children.
And what also bothered me was that I had seen small children at the theatre when I watched transformers 2. And I even remember one of them go "ew" on some parts. Shoot, I was thinking "ew" too.
I do think that they do a good job of rating games. I have played some games and think to myself "This could've been at least E10".
If anything, I think this highlights the way the rating system is dependent upon mainstream society's standards more than anything else. Certainly it's not dependent upon an objective and universal standard of truth as regards who is ready for what, and when. In less technical civilizations, the age of 13 marks the full onset of adulthood with all the privileges that entails. Only with the 1950's did the cultural and historical phenomenon of the "teenager" appear, signifying as it does an awkward transitional period between childhood and adulthood. Consequently, as 13 year olds will be at different stages in this culturally enforced transitional period, a transition that can only be defined only in relation to themselves and their personal development, I think there is no real ground for generalization about what a 13 year old is or is not ready for. Honestly, I don't know where I would be now if I didn't watch Ghost in the Shell and Blood Reign: The Curse of Yoma when I was 12, and I'm enough of a film buff to know a good many films rated PG-13 and R that can, and do have a similar positive effect.Danderson (post: 1326201) wrote:1. The lobby shootout scene probably gave it most of the R rating. If u give then idea of storming a government building to an unstable pre-teen/teen then it's only inevitable what could happen afterwards.
Nate (post: 1326118) wrote:I agree, I think the standards for what constitutes PG-13 have gotten REALLY lax. Transformers definitely should have been rated R, but because Michael Bay is a bigshot he talked down the MPAA (or so I heard).
Transformers 2 was tamer content-wise. There was a lot of questionable stuff in there but I really can't think of anything that was explicit enough to warrant an R rating, unlike the first movie (the whole "Sam's happy time" thing alone was enough to warrant an R, there wasn't anything that bad in the second movie).
What I find interesting, and I can't claim credit for this (James Rolfe gets credit for pointing this out), roles are switching from what they used to be. It used to be most comedy movies were rated PG or PG-13, and most action flicks were rated R. Look at Alien, or Terminator, or Robocop. Now, most comedy movies are rated R, and most action movies are rated PG or PG-13.
I think the reason for this is related to what you're saying. Action movies are getting PG-13 ratings because the standards for what constitutes PG-13 is becoming less restrictive. Comedies nowadays seem to have a lot of sexual or grossout humor, which earns them an R rating (and then a lot of them have "UNRATED" slapped across the DVD cover).
I don't know if this is necessarily a bad thing, although I do think it's very inappropriate to do, such as with Transformers which has kids' toys marketed for it, and kids love robots and stuff, so to have all that sexual humor is definitely out of line. It's part of the reason I hate Michael Bay and wish he hadn't gotten the rights to the movies in the first place.
Although interestingly the original Transformers movie, when shown in theaters, had two instances of swearing, one of which was edited out on the video release (Bumblebee's infamous "Oh s***, what are we gonna do now?" which made a lot of kids in the theaters go "He said what now?").
Etoh*the*Greato (post: 1328680) wrote:PG doesn't equal emotional impact of that sort, it measures potentially harmful content. Yes, Marley and Me was a heartwrenching movie, but the system isn't designed to judge that material. Bad stuff happens. I mean, think about Bambi, think about Fox and the hound, think about any Don Bluth film from the 1980's. Bad stuff happens, and it may be good for Kids to see that from time to time. Don't throw them infront of that particular bus, but it isn't bad for kids to see that.
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