Ratings Legend |
|
| G | GENERAL AUDIENCES [All ages admitted.] |
| PARENTAL GUIDANCE SUGGESTED [Some material may not be suitable for children.] | |
| PARENTS STRONGLY CAUTIONED [Some material may be inappropriate for children under 13.] | |
| RESTRICTED [Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian.] | |
| NO ONE 17 AND UNDER ADMITTED | |
| There is no information on rating immediately available on either the disc packaging or online. I generally take this to operatively mean it would probably be rated either PG-13 or R. | |
| Usually a second version of an R-rated movie that includes additional material that either places it between R and NC-17 or firmly in NC-17 without submitting the revised content in order to avoid the hassle of a possible NC-17 rating. This doesn't stop a company from distributing a film so long as the packaging loudly declares its unrated status, but that might as well put up a banner crying "BUY ME!" as far as I'm concerned. It's an effective marketing tactic for horror, science-fiction, and action films. | |
| Microsoft's Internet Explorer | IE wraps and shows the complete text of the pop-up box that displays when you hold your mouse cursor over any of the hyperlinks (this is a function of the title attribute for HTML tags as given in the HTML 4.0 specification for you geek wannabees), but IE refuses to display the color-coding for the movie ratings as I have coded them because of Microsoft's proprietary (read "poor") implementation of Cascading Style Sheet standards. |
| Mozilla Firefox | Firefox displays the color-coding for the movie ratings nicely, but it will not show the entire text of the hyperlink title attribute; it has about a 90-character limit and then you see ellipses. |
| Opera | Opera displays both full title-attribute text and the CCS-implemented color-coding for the movie ratings. Get a clue, Firefox, IE... |