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WHAT THE RATINGS MEAN:
G: "General Audiences-All Ages Admitted."
This is a film which contains nothing in theme,
language, nudity and sex, violence, etc. which
would, in the view of the Rating Board, be
offensive to parents whose younger children view
the film. The G rating is not a "certificate of
approval," nor does it signify a children's
film.
Some snippets of language may go beyond polite
conversation but they are common everyday
expressions. No stronger words are present in
G-rated films. The violence is at a minimum.
Nudity and sex scenes are not present; nor is
there any drug use content.
PG: "Parental Guidance Suggested. Some
Material May Not Be Suitable For Children."
This is a film which clearly needs to be
examined or inquired into by parents before they
let their children attend. The label PG plainly
states that parents may consider some material
unsuitable for their children, but the parent
must make the decision.
Parents are warned against sending their
children, unseen and without inquiry, to
PG-rated movies.
The theme of a PG-rated film may itself call for
parental guidance. There may be some profanity
in these films. There may be some violence or
brief nudity. But these elements are not deemed
so intense as to require that parents be
strongly cautioned beyond the suggestion of
parental guidance. There is no drug use content
in a PG-rated film.
The PG rating, suggesting parental guidance, is
thus an alert for examination of a film by
parents before deciding on its viewing by their
children.
Obviously such a line is difficult to draw. In
our pluralistic society it is not easy to make
judgments without incurring some disagreement.
So long as parents know they must exercise
parental responsibility, the rating serves as a
meaningful guide and as a warning.
PG-13: "Parents Strongly Cautioned. Some
Material May Be Inappropriate For
Children Under 13."
PG-13 is thus a sterner warning to parents to
determine for themselves the attendance in
particular of their younger children as they
might consider some material not suited for
them. Parents, by the rating, are alerted to be
very careful about the attendance of their
under-teenage children.
A PG-13 film is one which, in the view of the
Rating Board, leaps beyond the boundaries of the
PG rating in theme, violence, nudity,
sensuality, language, or other contents, but
does not quite fit within the restricted R
category. Any drug use content will initially
require at least a PG-13 rating. In effect, the
PG-13 cautions parents with more stringency than
usual to give special attention to this film
before they allow their 12-year olds and younger
to attend.
If nudity is sexually oriented, the film will
generally not be found in the PG-13 category. If
violence is too rough or persistent, the film
goes into the R (restricted) rating. A film's
single use of one of the harsher
sexually-derived words, though only as an
expletive, shall initially require the Rating
Board to issue that film at least a PG-13
rating. More than one such expletive must lead
the Rating Board to issue a film an R rating, as
must even one of these words used in a sexual
context. These films can be rated less severely,
however, if by a special vote, the Rating Board
feels that a lesser rating would more
responsibly reflect the opinion of American
parents.
PG-13 places larger responsibilities on parents
for their children's moviegoing. The voluntary
rating system is not a surrogate parent, nor
should it be. It cannot, and should not, insert
itself in family decisions that only parents
can, and should, make. Its purpose is to give
prescreening advance informational warnings, so
that parents can form their own judgments. PG-13
is designed to make these parental decisions
easier for films between PG and R.
R: "Restricted, Under 17 Requires
Accompanying Parent Or Adult Guardian."
In the opinion of the Rating Board, this film
definitely contains some adult material. Parents
are strongly urged to find out more about this
film before they allow their children to
accompany them.
An R-rated film may include hard language, or
tough violence, or nudity within sensual scenes,
or drug abuse or other elements, or a
combination of some of the above, so that
parents are counseled, in advance, to take this
advisory rating very seriously. Parents must
find out more about an R-rated movie before they
allow their teenagers to view it.
NC-17: "No One 17 And Under Admitted."
This rating declares that the Rating Board
believes that this is a film that most parents
will consider patently too adult for their
youngsters under 17. No children will be
admitted. NC-17 does not necessarily mean
"obscene or pornographic" in the oft-accepted or
legal meaning of those words. The Board does not
and cannot mark films with those words. These
are legal terms and for courts to decide. The
reasons for the application of an NC-17 rating
can be violence or sex or aberrational behavior
or drug abuse or any other elements which, when
present, most parents would consider too strong
and therefore off-limits for viewing by their
children.
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For more information on
Movie Ratings, please visit:
http://www.cara.org or
http://www.mpaa.org
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