An interesting tweet today from Evil Dead director Fede Alvarez revealed (unsurprisingly) that the film received an NC-17 rating when submitted to the MPAA.

 

NC-17, of course, is the most extreme rating that the MPAA will give. It replaced the X rating in 1990, and since then only a handful of films have been released as NC-17.

 

The description of the rating is as follows:

 

NC-17 — No One 17 and Under Admitted. An NC-17 rated motion picture is one that, in the view of the Rating Board, most parents would consider patently too adult for their children 17 and under. No children will be admitted. NC-17 does not mean “obscene” or “pornographic” in the common or legal meaning of those words, and should not be construed as a negative judgment in any sense. The rating simply signals that the content is appropriate only for an adult audience. An NC-17 rating can be based on violence, sex, aberrational behavior, drug abuse or any other element that most parents would consider too strong and therefore off-limits for viewing by their children.

 

Evil Dead won’t hit theatres like this of course. The tweet confirmed that Alvarez recut the film to achieve the less extreme R rating.

 

 

Does this mean we’ll be getting an unrated cut of the film when it hits Blu-Ray? You have seen the Red Band trailer for Evil Dead, haven’t you?

 

Evil Dead hits theatres on April 12th.

 

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Thank the space jockey, Fox has announced that Prometheus will indeed be rated R! The MPAA has issued Ridley Scott’s return to the sci-fi genre an R rating for “sci-fi violence including some intense images, and brief language.” These days studio’s tend to water down movies to get PG-13 ratings because they fear the dreaded R rating. Big budget movies that are rated R, such as Prometheus, are seen as risky business because they limit the exposure to younger audiences. I’m sure I’m not the only one though who will be glad to see Sir Ridley’s R rated return to the universe he helped launch with 1979’s Alien. Gods forbid we should have to sit through another PG-13 alien movie because we all remember how “awesome” Alien vs. Predator was.

Prometheus stars Noomi Rapace, Michael Fassbender, Charlize Theron and Guy Pearce and is set for release on June 8th.

With all of the hoopla and controversy surrounding the release of Bully and the MPAA’s refusal to lower the documentary’s rating from R to PG-13, I had to see the film first hand. After countless public outcries by film mogul Harvey Weinstein complaining that the movie would never be seen by its most intended audience, it was less than a week ago that director Lee Hirsch and the MPAA finally reached an agreement. Forced to remove three expletives from the original cut of the film, Hirsch made the necessary changes and Bully ultimately received the PG-13 rating it desired. Now, Harvey Weinstein (a businessman first and activist second) can rest easy.

Bully focuses on 5 central stories of recent torment, all of which are performed by middle school and high school students throughout the United States. Attempting to bring the severity of bullying to the forefront, the documentary examines the lives of current victims and, even in two accounts, the family’s of suicide victims. Hoping to spark some sort of change in the methods used by parents to raise their children and schools to monitor their students, the film journeys deep into this problematic issue.

Where do I begin? Bully serves as a much needed perspective into the lives of our nation’s youth. Throughout the film, the audience forms a bond with bullied adolescents such as Alex Libby (a unique boy who barely survived his massively premature birth), Kelby Johnson (a 16 year old openly gay female teenager in Oklahoma), and Ja’Meya Jackson (a verbally abused student arrested for her extreme actions to end the torment). Opening our eyes to the cruel and harsh reality that is every day life for countless youth all across the country, Bully is an appropriate platform to address the topic. Director Lee Hirsch, who claims to have been a victim of similar circumstances himself as a child, does an admirable job of confronting the issue with dignity and class. His efforts clearly deserve to be recognized and commended.

On the other hand, Bully fails to ever look to the future. Primarily spending its entirety focusing on the unfathomable stories of the previously mentioned trio of victims as well as two families coping with the suicides of their sons, the film never tries to conjure up any sort of solution to the problem. Other than presenting the viewer with the obvious flaws in our school systems and most districts’ lack of attention to the issue, Bully ignores any other suggestions for resolution. The audience is successfully made aware of this delicate, yet deliberate, dilemma, however, the documentary seems to believe that knowledge of the problem is all that needs to be done in order to change this unruly behavior. I, on the contrary, disagree and would have preferred it if Bully expanded its purpose and provided some insight into other ways to correct this ordeal.

Lee Hirsch does an honorable job of tugging at the audience’s heartstrings and presenting a clearer picture into the world of the abused. Perhaps screening the documentary to middle and high school students around the country will help prevent bullying. As seen by the heartbreaking stories of 17 year old Tyler Long and 11 year old Ty Smalley, both of whom took their own lives as a result of the chronic harassment, Bully has the ability to change people. But as compassionate as humans can be, sometimes nothing is more difficult for a child to overcome than peer pressure. And until our country can conjure up a better solution to help put an end to bullying, this problem may never go away … no matter how much we know about it.

Stars: 2 stars out of 4

Grade: C+

When MCDave isn’t on Geekscape he’s probably acting a fool at Movie Reviews By Dave

Alberta announced today that it would follow suit with B.C. and give Bully a PG rating. The rating system in Canada is more or less the same as it is in the States (G, PG, 14A [PG-13], 18-A [R], and A [NC-17]).  The American MPAA “R” rating is similar to the Canadian “18A” category (under-18s admitted with adult accompaniment). The Canadian “R” category would be similar to the American NC-17 rating.  The Canadian ratings almost never follow the American counterpart, so it isn’t for a movie to get an R in the states and a PG or 14A in Canada.  Ratings are important for a movies success, but it seems the US doesn’t understand the necessity for movies like Bully to be seen by all ages. It’s more important for children to be seeing this movie than it is for adults being the only ones that can see it in the US.

A lot of us geeks were picked on and bullied growing up turning us into the bullies of the internet. Stop the cycle, adults aren’t the ones that can prevent kids from being bullied but this movie may help change the behavior of children if they get the chance to see it.

Now I think we all have our issues with the MPAA. One of my favorite documentaries This Film Is Not Yet Rated digs into the very confusing process of how a movie is rated. It’s not new to hear about filmmakers looking to get a film’s rating over-turned. The newest challenge has come from the Weinstein Company. This is not the first time that the Weinsteins have had to battle the MPAA over a rating but more than any other film, I think these guys have a point.


Weinstein Co want to release a documentary called Bully about the bullying issue in American High Schools.  The Weinstein’s believe (and quite correctly) that a film like this should be able to be seen by kids of all ages, specifically the ones dealing with Bullying. However, the MPAA has continually given it an R rating. After Harvey Weinstein and Alex Libby (one of the kids bullied in the documentary) failed to get the rating over turned Harvey offered the following statement.

As of today, The Weinstein Company is considering a leave of absence from the MPAA for the foreseeable future. We respect the MPAA and their process but feel this time it has just been a bridge too far.

I have been through many of these appeals, but this one vote loss is a huge blow to me personally. Alex Libby 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.

With school-age children of my own, I know this is a crucial issue and school districts across the U.S. have responded in kind. The Cincinnati school district signed on to bus 40,000 of their students to the movie — but because the appeals board retained the R rating, the school district will have to cancel those plans.

I personally am going to ask celebrities and personalities worldwide, from Lady Gaga (who has a foundation of her own) to the Duchess of Cambridge (who was a victim of bullying and donated wedding proceeds) to First Lady Michelle Obama (whose foundation has reached out to us as well), to take a stand with me in eradicating bullying and getting the youth into see this movie without restriction.

I can’t speak for all of Geekscape but I stand behind the Weinsteins on this one.