This Film is Not Yet Rated (2006)

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Rating: NONE
Release Date: Sep 1, 2006
Running Time: 97 mins.
Air Dates: 00/00/2006
Country Of Origin: United States
synopsis
The MPAA, a lobbying organization for the movie industry, maintains a rating system first implemented in 1968 by longtime president Jack Valenti. This system, with its age based content classification using letter grades G, PG, PG-13, R, and NC-17 (formerly X), has become a cultural icon. But behind its simple façade is a censoring process kept entirely secret. Board members are anonymous; deliberations are private; standards are seemingly arbitrary. Thus, the trade organization for the largest media corporations in America also keeps a trademarked lock on content regulation over our most unique and popular art form. Filmmaker Kirby Dick asks whether Hollywood movies and independent films are rated equally for comparable content; whether sexual content in gay-themed movies is given harsher ratings penalties than their heterosexual counterparts; whether it makes sense that extreme violence is given an R rating while sexuality is banished to the cutting room floor; whether Hollywood studios receive detailed directions as to how to change an NC-17 film into an R, while independent film producers are left guessing; and finally, whether keeping the raters and the rating process secret leaves the MPAA entirely unaccountable for its decisions.
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Ever wonder why the rating system can be so kooky and who makes those decisions? The documentary This Film Is Not Yet Rated is curious, too, but the answers still remain blurry.

Story

Unfolding like a detective story, filmmaker Kirby Dick sets out to find who is making the decision to label the movies we see as G, PG, PG-13, R or NC-17. With interviews from past and present members of the Motion Picture Association of America, and with a history that takes viewers back to the early days of… Continued