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MPAA embraces NC-17!
In what I think is one of the more important announcements that the movie industry has unleased in the past few years, the MPAA has announced that they are going to embrace NC-17 films. This opens up so many new doors to potentially great films that would have otherwise been butchered to make an R rating.
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I guess this is a good thing? I think it will take a long while before people in the movie industry start to make films differently now that steps are being taken to push the NC-17 rating. The majority of people won't want to leave their comfort zone just yet.
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This isn't necessarily the first time this has happened, you know. Back in 1969 a little film directed by John Schlesinger received a rating of "X", which eventually became the rating we now know as "NC-17". That film was called Midnight Cowboy and it won an Academy Award for Best Picture, Best Director and Best Adapted Screenplay.
Whether the MPAA embraces this rating seems kind of pointless since any director worth his salt like Schlesinger was will make a great movie without compromise to his/her vision and still have it widely recognized; even in silver-spoon-up-the-ass circles like the AMPAAS. |
I think we're all missing the important point of this article.
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It's issues like this that make me happy I'm Canadian. All the provinces enforce their own rating systems, and all of them are far more lenient than the States' (with the exception of Ontario, which bans films left and right). In any case, this seems to be a step in the right direction for you guys.
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I don't imagine this is going to change anything.
Just because they're saying it's a-ok to make an NC-17 film, doesn't mean that people will. People want to make a film that sells. I'd imagine a good chunk of the crowd that views movies like this are going to be under 17. Most kids that are 17 don't have their IDs anyways. |
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