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Voluntary
Movie Rating System
www.filmratings.com
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All
ages admitted. This signifies that the
film rated
contains nothing most parents will
consider offensive for even their
youngest children to see or hear.
Nudity, sex scenes, and scenes of drug
use are absent; violence is minimal;
snippets of dialogue may go beyond
polite conversation but do not go beyond
common everyday expressions.
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Some
material may not be suitable for
children. This signifies that the film
rated may contain some material parents
might not like to expose to their young
children-material that will clearly need
to be examined or inquired about before
children are allowed to attend the film.
Explicit sex scenes and scenes of drug
use are absent; nudity, if present, is
seen only briefly, horror and violence
do not exceed moderate levels.
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Some
material may be inappropriate for
children under 13. This signifies that
the film rated may be inappropriate for
pre-teens. Parents should be especially
careful about letting their younger
children attend. Rough or persistent
violence is absent; sexually-oriented
nudity is generally absent; some scenes
of drug use may be seen; one use of the
harsher sexually derived words may be
heard.
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Under
17 requires accompanying parent or adult
guardian (age varies in some locations).
This signifies that the rating board has
concluded that the film rated contains
some adult material. Parents are urged
to learn more about the film before
taking their children to see it. An R
may be assigned due to, among other
things, a film's use of language, theme,
violence, sex or its portrayal of drug
use.
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This
signifies that the rating board believes
that most American parents would feel
that the film is patently adult and that
children age 17 and under should not be
admitted to it. The film may contain
explicit sex scenes, an accumulation of
sexually-oriented language, or scenes of
excessive violence. The NC-17
designation does not, however, signify
that the rated film is obscene or
pornographic.
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