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How are the unrated versions of movies different?

2006-12-17 08:47:41 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Entertainment & Music Movies

3 answers

Unrated versions of films contain material that would have changed the rating of the orginal release. When you are marketing to certain part of the population you want them to be able to get into the film easily. For instance, if you are marketing to teenagers it doesn't make sense to have an R rating. However on the DVD version it becomes a personal choice. The censors ratings are still there (and video stores should be watching who they rent to but this rarely happens) but they are largely ignored.

2006-12-17 08:53:58 · answer #1 · answered by Ars Magica 5 · 0 0

I could be how often are unrated movies obviously different. Sometimes one scene can change a movie from R to PG. In that event, they will either remove the scene or change the language to get the rating that they feel will have more of a box office appeal.

There are some movies that would have had a G rating but they added a few curse words to get an PG rating thinking it would do better in the box office. Sometimes it could be that you got a brief glimpse of T&A that did not show up in the theaters. 'The Grudge' showed that the child was abused before drowning.

2006-12-17 16:57:18 · answer #2 · answered by Mr Cellophane 6 · 0 0

unrated movie show the original scenes and they show everything unrated and uncut.

2006-12-17 16:53:37 · answer #3 · answered by dmathews6 2 · 0 0

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