When a movie is UNRATED...?!
Question: When a movie is UNRATED!.!.!.!?
what does it allow the movie to show that they cant show when it is rated pg-13 or R!.!.!.whats the point of making it unratedWww@Enter-QA@Com
Answers:
i think when its unrated they can swear more and show more nudityWww@Enter-QA@Com
When a movie is completed, it's submitted to various agencies for rating!. In the US, the ratings are done by the MPAA, the Motion Picture Association of America!. The various agencies rather anally count the number of boobs exposed, the number of times the f-word (and other words) is used, their reactions to the depictions of violence, and come up with a rating!.
Sometimes, like in Brian DePalma's remake of "Scarface," they give the film a rating of NC-17 (or 'X' formerly)!. This makes the producers go back to the editing room to remove the 11 seconds of film that caused the ratings!. (Really! DePalma trimmed 11 seconds to get an 'R' instead of an 'X')
Other times, though, like in "My Cousin, Vinny!" they give the film a PG-13, which causes the producers to go back to the editing room to ADD the f-word and other material because they did NOT want a PG-13 rating; they wanted the "R!."
When you see the DVD version that says "Unrated" it either means that the 11 seconds of Scarface have been restored, or that the film version was NEVER submitted to the MPAA because the producers, or the studios cut some footage, so the DVD has the film as originally made!.
Now the Director's cut!.!.!.
We can easily go from the sublime to the ridiculous!Www@Enter-QA@Com
Sometimes, like in Brian DePalma's remake of "Scarface," they give the film a rating of NC-17 (or 'X' formerly)!. This makes the producers go back to the editing room to remove the 11 seconds of film that caused the ratings!. (Really! DePalma trimmed 11 seconds to get an 'R' instead of an 'X')
Other times, though, like in "My Cousin, Vinny!" they give the film a PG-13, which causes the producers to go back to the editing room to ADD the f-word and other material because they did NOT want a PG-13 rating; they wanted the "R!."
When you see the DVD version that says "Unrated" it either means that the 11 seconds of Scarface have been restored, or that the film version was NEVER submitted to the MPAA because the producers, or the studios cut some footage, so the DVD has the film as originally made!.
Now the Director's cut!.!.!.
We can easily go from the sublime to the ridiculous!Www@Enter-QA@Com
It means two things!.
The first is the director has added scenes to the DVD release that, for whatever reason, he couldn't put in the theatrical release!.
The second is since the "new" film has not been resubmitted to the MPAA for rerating, the film is now "unrated"
(It also is a marketing gimmick, as you may think you are getting more and/or better nudity)Www@Enter-QA@Com
The first is the director has added scenes to the DVD release that, for whatever reason, he couldn't put in the theatrical release!.
The second is since the "new" film has not been resubmitted to the MPAA for rerating, the film is now "unrated"
(It also is a marketing gimmick, as you may think you are getting more and/or better nudity)Www@Enter-QA@Com
they can show the scenes that they didn't originally release!.Www@Enter-QA@Com
So they can show things they couldn't show in theaters!. Www@Enter-QA@Com
well they cant show to much in sex scenes and less violentWww@Enter-QA@Com