The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) supervises a board of 8 to 13 members who work for the Classification and Rating Administration (CARA). In turn, the board is funded by film distributors and producers, who pay a fee to have their films rated.
The MPAA President (currently Dan Glickman) chooses the
Chairman of the Rating Board. Board members are chosen from U.S. society
and must meet the qualifications of having a "parenthood experience"
and possessing an "intelligent maturity" (quoting the MPAA website).
They meet in Los Angeles, California, and apply the following ratings to
films:
Rating | Description |
---|---|
G | General Audiences. All ages admitted. |
PG | Parental Guidance Suggested. Some material may not be suitable for children. |
PG-13 | Parents Strongly Cautioned. Some material may be inappropriate for children under 13. |
R | Restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian. |
NC-17 | No one 17 and under admitted. |
Operating since 1968, an important difference between the MPAA
and movie rating boards of many other countries is the voluntary nature
of the American movie rating system. No studio, distributor, theater, or
video store is bound by any legislation to follow the ratings applied
by the MPAA ratings board.
However, member companies of the MPAA (Disney, 20th Century
Fox, Sony/Columbia Tristar, MGM, Paramount, Universal, and Warner Bros)
have good incentive to submit all of their releases for ratings along
with many other non-member studios. Many theaters and theatrical chains
have policies whereby they refuse to exhibit movies that have not been
rated by the MPAA. Also, the increasing threat by U.S. lawmakers to put
legislation in place if the industry cannot regulate itself, is
incentive for the motion picture industry to keep their own policing
efforts in force.
While the MPAA ratings appear on home video titles released in
the U.S., DVD releases are not considered separate products from the
original films and therefore retain the identical rating provided to
each movie for its theatrical release. That means MPAA ratings on video
releases do not take extra features into account. Also, if the main film
has been altered -- such as a special "Directors Edition" -- the film
will revert back to "Unrated" status when it is sold on home video
formats.
Movie Ratings Information
Since the dawn of mass media, many countries have attempted to
regulate, control, or even block certain messages or content from being
exhibited to their citizens at large.
Today, most democratic states are primarily interested in
"classifying" (as opposed to "censoring") media products--especially
movies--into age appropriate categories. The result has been the
formation of various movie rating boards and offices which typically
advise, and often enforce their decisions through legislation, as to
what ages of children may see a particular title.
Please click on a country you are interested in knowing more about. We plan on adding additional countries in the months ahead.
- USA MPAA Movie Ratings
- Canadian Movie Ratings
- British Movie Ratings
- Australian Movie Ratings
- New Zealand Movie Ratings
If you're looking for US MPAA or Canadian movie ratings for a
specific title, or if you'd like complete content information on a movie
along with a review written with parents in mind, check the over-one
thousand reviews on our site for movies in theaters or releasing on home video. You can also look for a particular movie title on our search page.
Also, we invite film classification boards from around the
world who are interested in having their information posted on this
website to contact us. Also, if your classifications are incorrectly
represented in any way on this site, please let us know. We hope to
maintain the accuracy of this information, and your input is greatly
appreciated.
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