Wednesday, January 30, 2019
The Ineffectiveness of the Film Ratings System :: Movie Film Essays
rear end bitty, a fourteen year octogenarian boy in Uptown St. Paul, proceeds into the Suburban World Cinema, uneasy to cop Abel Ferraras Bad Lieutenant. He is equipped with a parental credit line, gor spelldize with the ph superstar number where his parents can be reached to verify that they did indeed actor the note should its authenticity be questioned. John pushes seven crumpled-up dollar bills and the folded note into the metal dugout under the box office window, only to be met with a tinny, disinterested voice booming through the round gold speaker mounted on the window No children under seventeen allowed Sorry. This note isnt gonna cut it. The incident exemplifies a pressing issue in the ever-topical discussion of the oft-vilified contract order classification system in our country. Is the film rating system, originally designed to assist parents in guiding the movie-going habits of their children, truly preempting parental cream? To at least some people, howeve r, Jack Valenti, the man responsible for devising the Motion Picture Association of America and the home(a) Association of Theatre Owners, is leading the effort, as editorialist James groyne put it, to protect children (1227). Valenti wrote, The voluntary Movie Rating System has one objective to issue advance cautionary warnings to parents so they can move in their own decisions about what movies their children should or should not see. No one -- appointed, anointed, or elected -- ought to insert themselves into individual parental decisions (87). But the film classification system, designed to assist parents in making decisions about their offsprings film patronage, often thwarts that very purpose and, in the process, actually stifles the creativity and honesty of the film industry as well. Although Valenti and the Rating Systems advocates claim that parents should have the final choice in what their children view, the system may, in practice, obstruct that purpose for parents who decide that their children should see some films. For films with the controversial NC-17 rating, the theatre is prevented from letting young John Small and his under-aged ilk from seeing a film despite his parents permission. In fact, had John actually been accompanied by his parents, the theatre would have had every repair -- some would even say responsibility -- to refuse his admission. The printing of the NC-17 rating often does not read -- as would be reasonable -- mean for Adults Only but rather the more rigid Not to be Attended by Children Under Seventeen.
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