Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

MPAA: Kids Can't Handle "Truth"

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • MPAA: Kids Can't Handle "Truth"

    MPAA: Kids Can't Handle "Truth"

    by Josh Grossberg
    Sep 9, 2005, 10:30 AM PT

    Two's company but three's definitely a crowd.

    That's the verdict of the Motion Picture Association of America, whose
    Ratings and Classifications Board has upheld the dreaded _NC-17
    rating_ (http://www.eonline.com/News/Items/0,1,17213,00.html) it
    slapped on Canadian filmmaker _Atom Egoyan_
    (http://www.eonline.com/Facts/People/Stori es/0,127,31877,00.html) 's
    new art-house drama, Where the Truth Lies, because it featured a
    ménage à trois.

    The movie, which stars _Kevin Bacon_
    (http://www.eonline.com/Facts/People/Bio/0,128,102,00.html) , _Colin
    Firth_ (http://www.eonline.com/Facts/People/Bio/0,128,537 0,00.html) ,
    _Rachel Blanchard_
    (http://www.eonline.com/Facts/People/Bi o/0,128,38399,00.html) and
    _Alison Lohman_
    (http://www.eonline.com/Facts/People/Bio/0 ,128,71269,00.html) , makes
    its North American debut next week at the _Toronto Film Festival_
    (http://www.eonline.com/News/Items/0,1,16931,00.html) .

    It follows a popular 1950s-era comedy duo (Bacon and Firth) whose
    career is derailed after they engage in a night of debauchery,
    including a threesome with a beautiful woman who turns up dead the
    next day in their hotel suite.

    After reviewing Truth last month, the MPAA's Ratings and
    Classifications Board gave the picture an NC-17, which means no one
    under the age of 17 is allowed admission, citing "some explicit
    sexuality" involving Bacon, Firthand Blanchard.

    The decision prompted protests from independent distributor ThinkFilm,
    which claimed the three-way was artfully choreographed by Egoyan and
    is central to the movie's mystery. The company also noted that the
    rating severely hampered the flick's commercial prospects, since many
    exhibitors refuse to book NC-17-rated fare.

    ThinkFilm appealed and on Wednesday the filmmaker and Blanchard went
    beforea 10-member panel in Los Angeles to make their case. Egoyan
    argued that he filmed the ménage in a sustained master shot and that
    trimming it would be nearly impossible without losing the scene's
    intent, which anchors the storyline.

    An NC-17 is an "unwarranted response given the story it's telling and
    the way it needed to be told," Egoyan told the Associated Press. "We
    couldn't trim any more without destroying the heart of the movie."

    Blanchard added that she had no problem shedding her inhibitions,
    since the scene was vital to the integrity of the drama being played
    out.

    "The film is basically about the power of celebrity and the abuse of
    that power," she told the wire service. "It sort of expands on how
    abusing that power sexually has consequences. It's a redeeming film
    and it has a positive message."

    Unfortunately their arguments failed to make the cut. The appeals
    board voted 6-4 to overturn the NC-17 rating and give it an R,
    falling one vote short of the required two-thirds majority.

    Despite the setback, Where the Truth Lies will still be released
    uncut. Because ThinkFilm is not an MPAA signatory like the major
    studios, it has the option of issuing the movie unrated, and,
    according to chairman Robert Santos, that's exactly what the company
    intends to do.

    That's the same strategy the distributor recently employed with its
    potty-mouthed documentary The Aristocrats, in which a who's-who of
    comedians riff on the same dirty joke. Nonetheless, ThinkFilm faces an
    uphill battle at the box office, since many exhibitors outside major
    cities typically shy away from screening unrated films, and media
    outlets don't like to advertise such fare.

    Another problem possibly hindering profitability: ThinkFilms is
    contractually required to deliver an R-rated version to Columbia
    TriStar Home Video. No word yet whether the film will need to be
    chopped for its DVD release.

    Where The Truth Lies is set to open in New York and Los Angeles on
    Oct. 14 before expanding one week later to whatever U.S. theaters
    agree to book it. E! Entertainment Television, Inc.
Working...
X