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When Movies Weren't Rated

Frank Sinatra's The DetectiveThe movies reigned supreme over the entertainment business for a nice run of the 20th century. They knocked live Vaudeville performances out of the saddle, and never looked back. The movie industry didn't notice when Scotsman John Logie Baird sent a television signal over the wires from London to Glasgow in 1927.

The Golden Age of Hollywood lasted until the late 1950's. By then, televisions sat in a large percentage of American households' living rooms, and movie studios were starting to feel the pinch.

So about this time, movies began getting more, shall we say, risque. After all, you had to do SOMETHING to keep the public paying money to go to the cinema.

But that meant conflict with the Hays Code. This list of rules, adopted by the MPAA in 1930, spelled out what was and was not considered morally acceptable in the production of motion pictures for a public audience.

The code was pretty puritan in nature. Check out the Wikipedia entry to get an idea. By the late 1950's, it was obvious that the direction Hollywood was heading with regards to what movies would depict would soon mean a clash.

The clash came by the MPAA refusing to certify movies, and the studios releasing them anyway. These films included Some Like It Hot (recently voted the funniest movie of all time by the American Film Institute), Psycho, The Man with the Golden Arm, Anatomy of a Murder, and others. Something had to be done, or the MPAA would lose its grip over film making.

In 1966, the MPAA revised the Hays Code. It now allowed for a vague SMA rating, Suggested for Mature Audiences. It pleased nobody, including the filmmakers, or the audiences concerned about adult content being seen when not wanted.

Two movies were released in 1967 with the "F bomb." They had the same mealy-mouthed SMA rating as did other films that might have contained a single "damn." Obviously, this system didn't work.

So in 1968, in large part due to controversy caused by Frank Sinatra's adult-themed The Detective, a murder mystery that would probably receive an R rating today, the MPAA adopted the ratings system.

You might remember that they were originally G, M, R, and X. Parents were confused by the M rating, many thinking it was more graphic than R, so in 1970 it was replaced by GP (general patronage). In 1972, GP became PG (parental guidance).

Today. we're used to checking a movie's ratings. No doubt about it, many movies rated X in the 60's (e.g. Midnight Cowboy) would barely rate an R today. The times, they are certainly a-changing. And sadly, IMHO, Hollywood seems to have not noticed that some recent G-rated films like The Rookie and The Princess Diaries made big box office bucks.

But if you remember JFK, you remember going to the movies when ratings were something that either didn't exist, or that nobody paid any attention to.

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Comments (3)

Craig:

I still can remember the first movie I, and my girlfriend, later my wife, saw together. "Blue Hawaii," and trying so hard for the rest of my life to sing to my wife like Mr. Presley. She was 6 and I, 5. Even then I had I thing for older women. She held my hand and asked, "buy me a chili dog,honey." It was then I relized just how expensive girls were. Gee! I think the hot dog was .35 cents, a fortune. But after 20 years of marriage I definity came out ahead. I just couldn't help falling in love...

Rivers End:

I remember the revamped ratings system. I had forgotten about the M rating. I have seen movies in all ratings. I really liked horror movies and some of those tended to be not rated or even an x rating.

Ratings and supposed danger are an interesting subject that perhaps deserved more inspection and consideration but I guess this might not be the place. But given that nearly anyone cold make a film or home movie and that it only got much easier with camcorders, boundaries were bound to be pushed and explored.

Some boundaries are perhaps not worth maintaining or should be handled differently. But our wars on drugs, alcohol, terrorism, poverty, injustice, prostitution, porn etc. have all been failures. Human nature is impossible to control or hold back.

We are entering new ground all the time and it forces us to re-examine what we are doing and where we are going. If we get it wrong, we solve nothing and might even do great harm as prohibition did. I believe too often we have chosen tokenism over real meaningful solutions to problems. I see the ratings system that way.

Again, as Ron pointed out, we boomers saw it go from nothing to today, or we were close to seeing it go from 0 to 60 in no time. But to much acceleration too fast can lead to some bad crashes. I only wish people would give it all more thought. Perhaps we could have avoided another depression. Now we are going from prosperity to poverty with lightning speed. I hope you all like change, cause I think the weather is changing. Better git yerself a raincoat or something.

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This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on February 28, 2007 12:49 AM.

The previous post in this blog was Here's Johnny!.

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