Submitted by Zealousideal_Art2159 t3_zzbgrj in movies
In the 80s and 90s, the majority of the Disney and Don Bluth animated movies were given the "General Audiences" rating, despite most of them containing some rather dark scenes and themes, including onscreen death and blood. But nowadays, PG has just become the default for animated movies, with movies like Home on the Range, Uglydolls, Smurfs: The Lost Village, and most of the Illumination movies getting it despite being tamer than most G-Rated movies from the prior decades. It's gotten to the point that movies blatantly geared towards younger children end up getting it, such as Latte and the Magic Waterstone and Ice Princess Lily. It wouldn't bug me as much, except when a movie like Coraline or more recently, Turning Red, comes out, people complain that some material in them wasn't suitable for kids, as if that's not the literal meaning of PG.
I've heard the argument about studios deliberately avoiding the G-Rating due to the stigma of it being "just for kids", but...when did that happen? Being rated G didn't stop movies like Lion King or Finding Nemo from being huge successes, and even in the 2010s, the Toy Story 3 and 4 were rated G and made over a billion dollars. Most people wouldn't call those movies just for kids despite the G rating. At the very least, you'd think the more major studios wouldn't be as uncomfortable with the rating. But beyond that, the purpose of the MPAA ratings shouldn't be getting the most marketable rating, but the most accurate one. If your movie doesn't require parental supervision, it shouldn't get the rating, nor should studios try to force it to. All that does is reinforce the idea that G movies are "kids-only" flicks, when that's not what the rating means.
Ideally, the PG rating should be reserved for movies actually aimed at older kids, like most of the Laika movies, Next Gen, or The Sea Beast. But movies that just get the rating for "mild action" or "mild rude humor" should probably just be rated G. Most kids aren't gonna be harmed by a movie featuring slapstick violence or a brief dirty joke.
TheRuinerJyrm t1_j2alnw2 wrote
There is no "accurate" rating in the first place; it's entirely arbitrary and the MPA is a joke.