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Bully's R Rating Should Mean the End of the MPAA
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Topic Started: Feb 27 2012, 10:09 PM (409 Views)
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Psycho Werekitsune
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Feb 27 2012, 10:09 PM
Post #1
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Part man...part beast...full psycho!
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Sauce
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The new documentary Bully takes on the issue of harassment in American high schools, depicting real scenes of school bus torture, schoolyard violence, administrative indifference, and the tragic fallout in explicit detail. Now, the Motion Picture Association of America has made sure that most American high school students won't be able to see the film: It's slapped the doc with an R rating.
That's a problem for producer Harvey Weinstein, who had lobbied for a PG-13 label so he could tour the film in middle and high schools. The MPAA admitted that the documentary "can serve as a vehicle" for student discussion around bullying, but insisted that the film nevertheless "contains certain language" that requires it be rated R. The result? Teenagers will be barred from watching a documentary about what teenagers actually say and do to one another.
Weinstein is fighting back. He's threatened to withdraw The Weinstein Company, which produces films like My Week With Marilyn and The Artist, from the MPAA's rating system altogether. MPAA ratings are voluntary, but filmmakers fear that releasing an unrated film spells box office failure, as many movie theaters won't show films that don't undergo the regulatory process. "I have been through many of these appeals, but this one ... is a huge blow to me personally," Weinstein said. He's not alone. Alex Libby, one of the bullied teens featured in the film, also "gave an impassioned plea and eloquently defended the need for kids to be able to see this movie on their own, not with their parents, because that is the only way to truly make a change."
This is not the first time the MPAA has inspired a filmmaker's righteous indignation. Independent filmmaker Heather Ferreira has advised her fellow filmmakers to offer their movies for download on the internet instead of through the studio system to sidestep the MPAA's censorship. In the unrated 2006 documentary This Film Is Not Yet Rated, South Park's Trey Parker and Matt Stone, Boys Don't Cry's Kimberly Pierce, and Requiem for a Dream's Darren Aronofsky all railed against the MPAA's puritanical and often arbitrary rating system. The documentary exposed the MPAA's cadre of untrained anonymous raters, who are meant to represent regular American parents, but are really free to impose their own backwards values on the rest of the population. These untouchable judges rate gay sex as more explicit than straight sex, view sexual content and crass language as more troubling than horrific violence, are directly influenced by members of the clergy and are not necessarily even parents of teens.
But of course, Bully is a much different film than South Park: Bigger, Longer, & Uncut. The documentary is the first unambiguously feel-good film in recent memory to take a stand against the MPAA's rating system, and to do so in the name of children's welfare, not just artistic freedom. Because Bully is a film that parents will actually want their children to see, it stands a chance to make a serious dent in the MPAA's stranglehold over movie ratings.
I hope Harvey Weinstein does withdraw from the MPAA, and that other major film producers join him. The MPAA's reign rests on the financial fears of filmmakers, but if big Hollywood producers refuse to play along, it would become bad business for movie theaters to not show unrated films. Parents are right to be concerned about the content their children are watching. What they don't need is an anonymous lobby of other parents to decide what's good and bad for them—especially if it means stopping their kids from watching a film as important as this.
As a victim of bullying in school myself, I am fully behind Mr. Weinstein's stance on the matter.
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EMBRACE THE NAKED!
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-Havoc the Tenrec-
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Feb 28 2012, 01:26 AM
Post #2
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I was only bullied a few times in HS by one guy, knowing he hasn't changed and because of what he did, I don't care if he lives or dies.
I'm actually more interested in hearing about this movie over the rating.
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html-initialize: <head> <blinkingtext/"I am growing stronger"</blenked> </endhtml>
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-Arem-
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Feb 29 2012, 02:53 AM
Post #3
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Even if he doesn't withdraw, I can't help but wonder how many underage people will go see it anyway. I mean, who knows how many went to see South Park.
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- Blacklightning
- Nov 14 2011, 02:48 AM
I like it when people use the word "gay" in any context other than a homosexual one - it only proves that they have the maturity of a five year old, as if their obsession with shooters didn't already do a good job of pointing that out. It's also pretty amusing that he pointed out Skyrim considering the fact that, y'know, it's set in the bloody medival era and doesn't even have muskets, let alone generic modern firearms.
But just for fun, let's play around with his logic a bit.
game - gun = gay game + gun = -gay game + gun + Arem = ???
Founder of #TeamArem
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-Nageki-
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Feb 29 2012, 03:12 AM
Post #4
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If this goes through it'll likely end up like when Stan Lee fought the Comics Code Authority when they told him they couldn't put the seal of approval on an anti-drug story just because it mentions drugs, regardless of the light they were cast in. Don't hear much about the Comics Code Authority anymore, do you? Didn't think so. Now, they were a smaller organization than the MPAA, but I see a similar effect taking place.
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Psycho Werekitsune
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Feb 29 2012, 03:58 AM
Post #5
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Part man...part beast...full psycho!
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Considering the Comic's Code Authority was the reason the entire industry became so exclusive, I'd be glad if the same happened here.
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EMBRACE THE NAKED!
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