i would love for it to be pg13 then they could get away with so much more stuff. but sadly, every movie has been PG so whats gonna stop GL from makin this one the same?
this thread should be "what do you want it to rated"
__________________ i dont know what to do anymore
(.)(.) kuri kuri kuri
I want it to be PG-13, no doubt, but It will be PG. I was getting my hopes up for at least an ass-shot on Padme, but this is Lucas we're talking about... he won't show no ass. But seriously... I'm gonna go search for a naked Natalie Portman image right now (not the beach ones, though)!
queeq, we can make this point till the cows come home and
people just wont stop wishing. i just hope they dont break down and cry when
the end of the november trailer comes and it say "PG". its going to happen people, deal with it. no portman's hooters for the guys, no hayden's bare a$$ for the girls (except maybe a charred one) and thats that.
but hey, dont let me stop you from dreaming....vote till your heart's content
'tis true....lucas is as anally retentive as me....
they're always the same rating...
the credits are always the same (beginining and end)....
they're always roughly the same length....
they come out on the same date for chrissakes.....
he has dropped some surprises along the way so you never know, but i doubt this will be one of them.....
interesting article
USA TODAY disagrees with me it seems...
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Looking for proof? Filmmaker George Lucas expects the film to have a stricter rating than any of his previous Star Wars adventures, all of which have been rated a family-friendly PG.
The sixth Star Wars film (actually Episode III in the mythical timeline) details how Anakin Skywalker (Hayden Christensen) falls prey to "the dark side" and becomes Darth Vader, the iconic baddie first seen in 1977's Star Wars, now called Episode IV: A New Hope.
"This is the darkest of them all," says Lucas, speaking at a New York event to promote the recent release of his THX 1138 DVD. "I don't think it's going to be rated like the other ones. It's just more emotionally intense."
The PG-13 rating makes sense, considering the story line, says Scott Chitwood of TheForce.Net, a Star Wars news Web site. "From the original trilogy, we know that in Episode III, Anakin is horribly burned, Padmé (Amidala, the queen and senator who becomes the mother of Luke Skywalker and Princess Leia) dies, Mace Windu dies, Luke and Leia are separated, and the Jedi are wiped out," he says. "It would be hard to do them justice without the film being PG-13."
A move to that rating for Sith isn't likely to hurt attendance. Those with children ages 10 and 11 might think twice, says Paul Dergarabedian of box office tracking firm Exhibitor Relations, "but their kids probably already have video games at home that are PG-13 in violence levels."
A PG-13 would bring Star Wars in line with such blockbusters as the Lord of the Rings trilogy.
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