Latest MPAA Ratings: BULLETIN NO: 2170
COMMENTS
'Pirates 4' gets a rating as does the 'Sucker Punch' Extended Cut
Here are the new MPAA ratings from BULLETIN NO: 2170.
35 and Ticking
Rated R For some crude sexual content.
The Boxer And The Bombshell
Rated R For some language, sexuality/nudity, drug use and violence.
Clash
Rated R For violence and martial arts action, brief sexuality and language.
Clash of Empires
Rated R For bloody violence and battle sequences.
Happy Happy
Rated R For bloody violence and battle sequences.
Little Gobie
Rated G
Rated R For disturbing violent and sexual content, nudity and language.
Release Date: October 7, 2011
Rated PG-13 For intense sequences of action/adventure violence, some frightening images, sensuality and innuendo.
Release Date: May 20, 2011
Santa's Apprentice
Rated G
Sucker Punch: Extended Cut
Rated R For sexual content, some violence and brief language.
DVD/Blu-ray Date: TBA 2011
NOTE: EDITED VERSION. CONTENT IS DIFFERENT FROM PG-13 RATED VERSION, BULLETIN NO. 2161 (3/2/11).
Swinging With The Finkels
Rated R For Swinging With The Finkels
Tactical Force
Rated R For violence and language throughout.
Viva Riva!
Rated R/strong> For strong sexuality, graphic nudity, brutal violence, language and some drug use.
Wake Wood
Rated R For bloody violence including disturbing images, and brief sexuality.
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lol love the rating for swing with the finkels rated r FOR SWINGING WITH THE FINKELS
lol on the emphasis of viva rigas ratinga
and pirates 4 sounds usual
btw: the rating for sucker punch extended is just like terminator extended why not more violence? and sexual content same or dark and heavier
I'm going to give Sucker Punch a second chance. An R-rated extended cut sounds much better than the crappy theatrical version.
What do you know, Sucker Punch was R after all. Glad bout Pirates. Also, was Sucker Punch really THAT bad??
I'll be convinced that the R rated version of Sucker Punch is really deserving of it's R rating, only when I see it, and see that it goes beyond the realm of what's acceptable for a PG-13. Other than that I'm guessing that the R rated version of Sucker Punch, like a bunch of other films that are cut to get the PG-13, think Taken's unrated cut, that it could have been given the PG-13 the first time though, with no cuts. It's just the MPAA an outdated cultural dinosaur that it didn't get the PG-13 in the first place.
For the life of me though I don't understand why the MPAA doesn't seem to think that there can't be room for a lower restrictive rating between the PG-13 and the R. A lot of R rated films are not family fare, but they wouldn't harm a teenager. Why a film like Green Zone, Broken Blossoms, Lost In Translation, even the upcoming Breaking Dawn (which is going to have a heck of a time getting a PG-13), couldn't get something like an R-14 which would restrict children under the age of 14 without a guardian from seeing a film, but not a teenager who was 14 and up and unaccompanied, is beyond me. Giving teenagers their own restricted rating, seems to me to be the most logical way to tell parents which R rated films are soft(The King's Speech) and which ones are hard(Saw). In addition it would also give science fiction or fantasy films that are okay for a teenager to see, but not a young child, because maybe they are violent, or scary, or both, the benefit of the doubt. Films like Pan's Labyrinth or James Cameron's Aliens are not films that should be restricted to teenagers, because by the age of 14, teenagers should know that the aliens in the film are not real, or that Pan's Labyrinth is a fantasy. Why the MPAA system keeps trying to tell parents and their teens, that their teenagers without parental guidance, won't be able to tell the difference fantasy and reality is utterly quite silly.