Why 'Shame' Could 'Legitimize' the NC-17 Rating

Theater owners, MPAA argue that the stigma associated with the classification could be reversed with help from studios and the media.
Fox Searchlight's Shame opens Dec. 2 with a restrictive NC-17 rating, but that may be a good thing for similarly classified films in the future.
National Association of Theatre Owners (NATO) president John Fithian tells the Associated Press that the Steve McQueen-directed drama "is potentially an important step in the legitimate use of the NC-17."
STORY: Nudity, Three-Ways, Hints of Incest: A Studio's Plan to Sell 'Shame' to Oscar
"There just aren't very many movies released in the NC-17 rating anymore. We get maybe one or two a year. Filmmakers and movie studios are inappropriately afraid of the rating."
Fithian reveals that in a recent survey, 97 of 100 theater owners said they would play an NC-17 movie. He argues that filmmakers and studios should embrace, not fight, the classification, "What we currently have is a system that's slightly flawed in the reluctance of filmmakers and distributors to use the NC-17.
PHOTOS: 'Shame' Star Carey Mulligan at THR's Actress Roundtable
"What they'll do is cut and trim and try to cram a movie into the R rating category so that it escapes the NC-17, and that's not a legitimate use of the system. We end up with a very broad R category."
Box office analyst Paul Dergarabedian thinks Shame can capitalize on its uncommon status. He told AP, "R-rated movies are a dime a dozen. If Fox Searchlight can harness the power of the NC-17, they can turn it into a plus."
VIDEO: 'Shame' Director Steve McQueen at THR's Directors Roundtable
The MPAA said that the drama earned the rating because of “some explicit sexual content," which includes full-frontal nudity, oral sex performed on men and women, and group sex.
Joan Graves, head of the group's ratings system arm, believes the "stigma" of NC-17 is due in part to negative press. She told AP, "I've always considered it a shame that for some reason some people consider it (a death sentence), and I blame the media in a way because they always act like it's gotten the kiss of death."
"I think NC-17 is a badge of honor, not a scarlet letter. We believe it is time for the rating to become usable in a serious manner," Searchlight president Steve Gilula told The Hollywood Reporter. "The sheer talent of the actors and the vision of the filmmaker are extraordinary. It's not a film that everyone will take easily, but it certainly breaks through the clutter and is distinctive and original. It's a game changer."
THR's Daily Must Feeds
-
'MasterChef' Judges Dish On Crazy Third Season
-
Madonna Pulls Swastika Stunt At Concert In Israel
-
Celine Dion Responds To Kate Winslet's Criticism
-
Nicki Minaj to HOT 97 "Count Me Out"
-
Lindsay Lohan Don't I Look Just Like Liz Taylor?
-
'Jersey Shore' Cast Going Down Fast!
-
Mads Mikkelsen Cast As NBC’s Hannibal
-
Louis C.K., Andrew Dice Clay to Join Woody Allen Film
In This Week's Magazine
Social & Mobile
- MOST SHARED
- MOST POPULAR
- 1
Lane Pryce's Disjointed, Predictable Journey on 'Mad Men' Season 5
- 2
Why 'Dark Knight Rises' Star Christian Bale Choked Up at MTV Movie Awards (Video)
- 3
Jerry O'Connell to Play Herman Munster in NBC's 'Munsters' Reboot
- 4
Family Business: Kurt Sutter and Wife Katey Sagal on the Set of 'Sons of Anarchy'
- 5
Prometheus: Film Review
- 6
The Dark Knight Rises Trailer 3
- 7
Killed Characters, Fired Bosses and Canceled Shows: TV's Top Drama Showrunners Tell All (Video)
- 8
Killed Characters, Fired Bosses and Canceled Shows: TV's Top Drama Showrunners Tell All
- 9
Ashley Tisdale to Star in 'Scary Movie 5'
- 10
'Iron Man 3' Image Released as Shooting Begins (Photo)

