TheOtherVillainess
Luminous beings we are, not this crude matter.....
- Joined
- Oct 16, 2003
- Messages
- 6,406
I hope we can keep this a nice, safe, friendly debate. But just to be safe, I'm donning my fire-proof suit now, in case of flames.
I just finished watching a program that I TiVo'd off of AMC late last night called "Bleep! Sanitizing Hollywood". Until I watched this, I never knew that censoring of films existed beyond what they censor for television/commercial airlines. I didn't realize that companies existed like Clean Flix and Family Flix (both located in Utah) that existed solely to sanitize movies for the home viewer. They remove nudity, gratituous violence, cursing and other things normally edited as if you were going to watch it on a regular TV channel.
However, this has the directors in an uproar and I have to sort of take their side on some of it. These people are censoring movies just to censor them, because apparently the directors can't seem to do it themselves. And the MPAA (I think that's what it is..somebody correct me if I'm wrong) ratings such as PG, PG-13, R and NC-17 aren't good enough for the sanitizers. They feel they must go a step beyond this and do it themselves.
There also exists a DVD player with software for censoring called CleanPlay that lets YOU the viewer decide what to censor. Which is fine, I think. You are choosing to censor what you see in your own home without altering the original DVD itself.
The sanitizers make 'cleaned up' copies of movies and sell/rent them to the public as if it were not a copyright violation, which it is. It's illegal and somehow they are still managing to get away with it. While I agree in part with the idea of wanting to clean up movies for your children, I also think that it's YOUR job as the parent to decide what your son/daughter is old enough/mature enough/ready to see. That's where the MPAA rating comes in..it helps you make your mind up as to whether or not movies of a certain rating or subject matter are appropriate for your family.
I know that's the way it was when I was growing up. We weren't allowed to see/rent anything that was PG-13 or R until I was in HS and even then my parents weren't really thrilled about us watching them Even when I was engaged to DH, certain movies were still taboo. One, The Breakfast Club (which isn't exactly tame, but fairly tame by today's teen flick standards), was forbidden because of a split-second scene where one male character (Bender)ends up looking up the skirt of a female character (Claire) and sees her virginal white panties.
Why is it now all of a sudden H ollywood's responsability to make movies that are clean enough (even if they are rated R) for young children to watch? Isn't a parent's job to make sure their young kids don't see movies that aren't appropriate? One woman on the documentary complained about a PG-13 movie not being suitable for her 10 year old DD. I was screaming at the TV at this point. I thought PG-13 meant not suitable for kids under the age of 13. The girl is 10!!! Maybe in 3 years she'll be ready for PG-13 movies but until then it's her mother's job to make sure she doesn't see anything she's not supposed to.
People are always clamoring for this show or that show to be taken off of television because it's too violent, too sexual, etc. HELLO! Why else did they invent the V-Chip if not to allow parents greater control over what comes into their living rooms?
TOV
I just finished watching a program that I TiVo'd off of AMC late last night called "Bleep! Sanitizing Hollywood". Until I watched this, I never knew that censoring of films existed beyond what they censor for television/commercial airlines. I didn't realize that companies existed like Clean Flix and Family Flix (both located in Utah) that existed solely to sanitize movies for the home viewer. They remove nudity, gratituous violence, cursing and other things normally edited as if you were going to watch it on a regular TV channel.
However, this has the directors in an uproar and I have to sort of take their side on some of it. These people are censoring movies just to censor them, because apparently the directors can't seem to do it themselves. And the MPAA (I think that's what it is..somebody correct me if I'm wrong) ratings such as PG, PG-13, R and NC-17 aren't good enough for the sanitizers. They feel they must go a step beyond this and do it themselves.
There also exists a DVD player with software for censoring called CleanPlay that lets YOU the viewer decide what to censor. Which is fine, I think. You are choosing to censor what you see in your own home without altering the original DVD itself.
The sanitizers make 'cleaned up' copies of movies and sell/rent them to the public as if it were not a copyright violation, which it is. It's illegal and somehow they are still managing to get away with it. While I agree in part with the idea of wanting to clean up movies for your children, I also think that it's YOUR job as the parent to decide what your son/daughter is old enough/mature enough/ready to see. That's where the MPAA rating comes in..it helps you make your mind up as to whether or not movies of a certain rating or subject matter are appropriate for your family.
I know that's the way it was when I was growing up. We weren't allowed to see/rent anything that was PG-13 or R until I was in HS and even then my parents weren't really thrilled about us watching them Even when I was engaged to DH, certain movies were still taboo. One, The Breakfast Club (which isn't exactly tame, but fairly tame by today's teen flick standards), was forbidden because of a split-second scene where one male character (Bender)ends up looking up the skirt of a female character (Claire) and sees her virginal white panties.
Why is it now all of a sudden H ollywood's responsability to make movies that are clean enough (even if they are rated R) for young children to watch? Isn't a parent's job to make sure their young kids don't see movies that aren't appropriate? One woman on the documentary complained about a PG-13 movie not being suitable for her 10 year old DD. I was screaming at the TV at this point. I thought PG-13 meant not suitable for kids under the age of 13. The girl is 10!!! Maybe in 3 years she'll be ready for PG-13 movies but until then it's her mother's job to make sure she doesn't see anything she's not supposed to.
People are always clamoring for this show or that show to be taken off of television because it's too violent, too sexual, etc. HELLO! Why else did they invent the V-Chip if not to allow parents greater control over what comes into their living rooms?
TOV
with opening motions and what-not.