Part One: https://cccmovies.blogspot.com/2026/04/confounding-film-ratings-part-one.html
Last time I mainly looked at violence and coarse language as factors in what determine a film’s rating, and how sometimes a rating can seem too harsh or oddly forgiving. Another factor that determines a film’s rating is sex and nudity, which the ratings associations are much quicker to condemn with 18-A or R-ratings or even the dreaded NC-17 if either are prolonged or graphic enough.
In part one I covered a movie I showed to a class, but I remember when I was in school being shown Romeo and Juliet (1968) in grade nine English class and all the boys grimacing at the scene when Leonard Whiting’s Romeo gets out of bed and his bare buttocks is shown without cutting away. I also remember gawking at Olivia Hussey’s exposed breasts, but in retrospect, I find it insane that either actor was shown nude at all, not just because of the film’s rating, but because they were both underage when the film was shot. The ratings for this movie hurt my brain. It’s 18-A in BC (understandable), but PG in Manitoba/Ontario, and originally rated G in the US, then only bumped up to a PG in 1973! I think the argument was that the nudity was so brief it wouldn’t bother many viewers. I also think my teacher went off the American rating when considering which version of the movie to show our class.
Romeo and Juliet’s nudity really isn’t that graphic, and while the film obviously deals with the sexual relations between the characters, the nudity itself is not overtly sexual—a distinguishing factor that the ratings associations watch for. For example, Confessions of a Dangerous Mind (2002) is rated R in the US/14-A in Canada, mainly for coarse language and violence, but there’s also a scene of full male nudity from the back, which I remember walking in on at age seven while my parents were watching it and being very confused by, as Sam Rockwell hides behind a fridge door to cover himself. It’s not sexual nudity, so no 18-A rating here in Canada. There’s one very famous movie from my lifetime, though, that somehow got away with a PG-13 rating despite featuring a level of nudity that has earned pretty much every other movie I can think of an R.
James Cameron’s Academy Award-winning Titanic (1997) is, surprisingly, one of few films from the director that features much notable nudity, and yet is also one of the few that isn’t R-rated. The other nude scene from him that comes to mind is in The Terminator (1984), which is also rated R for repeated profanity and bloody violence. Titanic carried a price tag of 200 million dollars, so I suspect the more accommodating certificate was negotiated in order to turn a greater profit, and I’m sure that helped immensely, but I’m also sure some viewers were taken aback when they saw Kate Winslet’s breasts, buttocks, and even a hint of her pubic hair. It wasn’t the first time she had decided to bare it all for the camera, and it wasn’t the last time, either, but it is curious that the MPA decided to overlook such explicit nudity this one time. Regardless of how brief it is, the nature of the nudity is still pretty sexual, which is the primary red flag for the MPA when it comes to uncensored human anatomy. Titanic is another of those instances where the rating varies in Canada. It’s 14-A in BC, but only PG in Alberta and Ontario.
I remember picking up on the fact that Deadpool 2 (2018) was rated 14-A in Canada whereas the first Deadpool (2016) carried an 18-A rating—the higher age rating being less common for most movies in general, but especially uncommon for superhero movies, even with that much swearing and violence—and correctly predicted there would not be as much sex or nudity in the sequel. I’m certain the overt female nudity in the strip club scene in Deadpool is what earned it the more restrictive rating. The ultra-gory violence, though? Oh, yeah, that’s fine. Occasionally, non-sexual nudity can still make its way into a movie with a rating lower than an R, such as with The Fifth Element (1997), Critters 2 (1988), and Dragonslayer (1981). A weird exception, though, is John Hughes’ directorial debut, Sixteen Candles (1984). It’s 14-A in Canada, but only PG in the US (from a pre-PG-13 era), with uncensored female nudity! It’s not part of a sex scene, but Hughes clearly meant for it to be provocative. Most of Hughes’ movies had appropriate ratings after this, except for Weird Science (1985), which somehow snuck some more nudity in and got away with PG-13.
Another exception to the rule of thumb for nudity is the Canadian film Atanarjuat: The Fast Runner (2000). This is another one I’ve shown to students for its educational value, having first seen it myself in a film class in university, but I only show it to grade twelve students because of one scene in particular with full frontal male nudity. It’s not sexual in nature, but it certainly is explicit! The male protagonist runs completely naked across the frozen tundra for several minutes, and later, there is some female nudity as well, though ironically not during the sex scene, which is mostly obscured through low lighting. Atanarjuat is rated 14-A in Canada, but R in the US.
I remember buying the DVD of the classic dinosaur film The Valley of Gwangi (1969) and laughing out loud at the rating it sported on the back. It was rated G for General Audiences! This means anyone of any age can watch a T. rex devour people off horseback, kill other dinosaurs, complete with blood oozing from their fatal wounds, and even violently kill an elephant which screams in agony! But it’s all okay because the special effects are dated and there’s no coarse language or nudity, so it couldn’t possibly upset anyone, right? I get that ratings are supposed to protect viewers, in a sense, and give parents an idea of how to guide their kids, but I find it funny when the rating fails to do so sometimes. I was sure caught off guard by the bare buttocks of a cave woman in When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth (1970), considering it had a G rating, too!
Zombieland (2009) confused the hell out of me for years by making me misremember what Anaconda (1997) was rated. Emma Stone has a line about her first R-rated movie being Anaconda, and for a while, I was gaslit into thinking it was among my own first R-rated movies, too, but that line was a flub. It was rated PG-13 in the US and 14-A in Canada. In that same genre, I saw Deep Blue Sea (1999) at age eight, because it was only rated PG, and it wasn’t long after that I saw Lake Placid (1999), which was 14-A, but I rented it from the video store with my mom, so was able to watch it no problem. Both were pretty violent, and both were rated R in the US, but why the different ratings in Canada? I can’t think of much to differentiate them in terms of animal-on-human violence, but maybe there was a little more profanity in Lake Placid? I can’t keep up with this nonsense.
I’ll probably find another reason to come back to movie ratings again one day, but I think this is enough for now. There are plenty of other movies with far lower ratings than what they should have received, given their content, but not as many movies rated higher than necessary, I find. For more reading on movie ratings, click the link below!
https://cccmovies.blogspot.com/2023/11/do-people-care-about-movie-ratings_20.html











.png)
.png)
.png)
.png)
.png)
.png)

.png)

.png)

.png)
.png)