Movie Review with Jeff McCullough: The Problem with Film Ratings
By Jeff McCullough on February 07, 2015 from Movie Review
Film is an industry unlike no other, run by the creativity and genius of artists, to make the best, and by consequence most profitable, product possible. However, there’s been an ugly blight hampering the creative flow and hamstringing directors for a while now. This unfortunate blemish is the MPAA, or Motion Picture Association of America, a somewhat mysterious board designed to rate films for their adult content, in an often heedless attempt to prevent parents from accidently scarring their wee ones with pictures of Jason Voorhees braining someone or even (gasp) a naked body. However, what was initially a good hearted effort quickly turned to one of the most ill thought and ridiculous processes ever conceived in an industry already known for its ridiculousness.
Many different movies face the MPAA’s chopping block, but no genre feels the hurt more than horror. By its nature, horror, next to maybe Last Tango in Paris style erotic thrillers, contain the content most prone to getting slapped with an R-rating, or even the dreaded NC-17. 2006’s The Hills Have Eyes was a fantastic film that was more or less unwatchable in theaters. Two minutes of the more gory scenes were cut to secure an R-rating, which might not seem like lot, but for a horror film whose scares rely heavily on cannibalistic, axe wielding mutants, those two minutes meant the difference between an edgy, knuckle biting film of almost unbearable tension and something as tame as your average Teletubbies episode. Thankfully for the unrated DVD cut, Hills was back to all its sickening glory, but the fact it had to be cut at all was just a slap in the face to fans and a hindrance for the director.

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