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Talk:Two Mules for Sister Sara: Difference between revisions

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Anyway, the ratings system in America was different back then and the MPAA are biased against sex in movies. Must be the insane conservatives.
Anyway, the ratings system in America was different back then and the MPAA are biased against sex in movies. Must be the insane conservatives.
Oh, read the first sub-section in this wiki article: [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motion_Picture_Association_of_America_film_rating_system#Criticisms/http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motion_Picture_Association_of_America_film_rating_system#Criticisms].[[User:Oliveira|Oliveira]] 18:10, 22 May 2009 (UTC)
Oh, read the first sub-section in this wiki article: [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motion_Picture_Association_of_America_film_rating_system#Criticisms/http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motion_Picture_Association_of_America_film_rating_system#Criticisms].[[User:Oliveira|Oliveira]] 18:10, 22 May 2009 (UTC)
:::It was some 'social conservatives' but the liberals tended to shun the violence.  We're still more uncomfortable with sex than violence.  I know that I am more uncomfortable when I'm sitting watching a film with an 80 year old grandma and some hot and heavy sex scene turns up.  I'm way more comfortable with a violent battle or car crash scene when viewing it with others.  But in the history of cinema, the filmmakers have always tried to push the envelope as to what was acceptable.  You should see some of the B&W silent films and the amount of nudity and violence there.  BTW, the first MORAL CODE enforcements against film were pushed by the 'social reformers', i.e. the same folks who were prohibitionists (do gooders who wanted liquor banned)  it wasn't really a left/right thing at the time.  Also the wikipedia note only lists the origins of the MPAA ratings, NOT the formal codes of censorship that popped up in the early 1900s and 1920s.  Also as PARENTS, people wanted the ratings.  if you're old enough to be a responsible parent, then you want to know what is appropriate for your kids to watch.  As a teen, I never appreciated that until I got much older. MPM




[[Image:TMFSSQuestionablePGrating.jpg|thumb|none|600px|A sword swung into a French soldier's face. Ouch.]]
[[Image:TMFSSQuestionablePGrating.jpg|thumb|none|600px|A sword swung into a French soldier's face. Ouch.]]

Revision as of 19:08, 22 May 2009

Questionable PG rating

We all know PG usually ment today's PG-13 rating back in the 60-70s time range, but doesn't this kind of go under R rating? I mean, this is pretty gruesome even by today's standards.

We all got emasculated since the 1970s. I remember seeing tons of nudity in Logan's Run (1976) and it was PG. That would rate a hard (R) today. In fact (speaking of Jenny Agutter) the film Walkabout was released as a PG (or GP I think in the day) and it had tons of full frontal nudity. I don't know if people got more 'sensitive' or it just became more politically correct. I know quite a few ADULTS who are uncomfortable with ANY type of screen nudity. WTF? In that aspect we've become the polar opposite of Europe, Japan & Australia as far as being prudes. MPM
Hey MPM, the ratings system in Australia is more fucked up than the american ratings system. I thought you would know that.
When I was in Australia, they had copious amounts of nudity on their broadcast television, so mister smart ass, what are you talking about? If anything has changed recently, I don't follow Aussie TV standard. MPM

Anyway, the ratings system in America was different back then and the MPAA are biased against sex in movies. Must be the insane conservatives. Oh, read the first sub-section in this wiki article: [1].Oliveira 18:10, 22 May 2009 (UTC)

It was some 'social conservatives' but the liberals tended to shun the violence. We're still more uncomfortable with sex than violence. I know that I am more uncomfortable when I'm sitting watching a film with an 80 year old grandma and some hot and heavy sex scene turns up. I'm way more comfortable with a violent battle or car crash scene when viewing it with others. But in the history of cinema, the filmmakers have always tried to push the envelope as to what was acceptable. You should see some of the B&W silent films and the amount of nudity and violence there. BTW, the first MORAL CODE enforcements against film were pushed by the 'social reformers', i.e. the same folks who were prohibitionists (do gooders who wanted liquor banned) it wasn't really a left/right thing at the time. Also the wikipedia note only lists the origins of the MPAA ratings, NOT the formal codes of censorship that popped up in the early 1900s and 1920s. Also as PARENTS, people wanted the ratings. if you're old enough to be a responsible parent, then you want to know what is appropriate for your kids to watch. As a teen, I never appreciated that until I got much older. MPM


Error creating thumbnail: File missing
A sword swung into a French soldier's face. Ouch.