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Thread: Smoking in movies

  1. #1

    Default Smoking in movies

    Give me a break...Guess we needed more protection from harming ourselves


    Smoking Will Play Role In Movie Ratings

    LOS ANGELES, May 11, 2007
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    (AP) Smoking will be a bigger factor in determining film ratings, the Motion Picture Association of America said Thursday, but critics said the move does not go far enough to discourage teens from taking up the habit.

    MPAA Chairman Dan Glickman said his group's ratings board, which previously had considered underage smoking in assigning film ratings, now will take into account smoking by adults, as well.

    That adds smoking to a list of such factors as sex, violence and language in determining the MPAA's G, PG, PG-13, R and NC-17 ratings.

    Film raters will consider the pervasiveness of tobacco use, whether it glamorizes smoking and the context in which smoking appears, as in movies set in the past when smoking was more common.

    Some critics of Hollywood's depictions of tobacco in films have urged that movies that show smoking be assigned an R rating, which would restrict those younger than 17 from seeing them.

    "I'm glad it's finally an issue they're taking up, but what they're proposing does not go far enough and is not going to make a difference," said Kori Titus, spokeswoman for Breathe California, which opposes film images of tobacco use that might encourage young people to start smoking.

    Glickman said a mandatory R rating for smoking would not "further the specific goal of providing information to parents on this issue."

    Smoking in movies with a G, PG or PG-13 rating has been on the decline, and the "percentage of films that included even a fleeting glimpse of smoking" declined from 60 percent to 52 percent between July 2004 and July 2006," Glickman said.

    Of those films, three-fourths received an R rating for other reasons, he said.

    "That means there's not a great amount of films in the unrestricted category as it stands," said Joan Graves, who heads the ratings board. "We're not saying we're ignoring the issue. We're trying the best way possible according to what we've learned from parents to give them information about what's in a film."

    Titus said smoking in films had declined in recent years but remains more prevalent than MPAA figures indicate.

    Descriptions on sex, violence and language that accompany movie ratings now will include such phrases as "glamorized smoking" or "pervasive smoking," Glickman said.

    If rated today, a film such as 2005's "Good Night, and Good Luck," about chain-smoking newsman Edward R. Murrow, would have carried a "pervasive smoking" tag but probably would have retained its PG rating because of its historical context in the 1950s, Graves said.

    Titus said film raters should be as tough on smoking as they are on bad language to minimize the effects of on-screen smoking on children, including her own 5-year-old daughter.

    "I don't want her using that language, but last time I checked, she's probably not going to die from that," Titus said. "If she starts smoking from these images she sees in movies, chances are she's probably going to die early from that."

    While Titus' group wants tougher ratings restrictions, the MPAA released statements of support for its plan from John Seffrin, chief executive officer of the American Cancer Society, U.S. Sen. Joe Biden and filmmaker Rob Reiner, among others.

    "By placing smoking on a par with considerations of violence and sex, the rating board has acknowledged the public-health dangers to children associated with glamorized images of a toxic and lethal addiction to tobacco," Barry Bloom, dean of the Harvard School of Public Health, said in a statement.

  2. #2
    Patrick Guest

    Default Re: Smoking in movies

    This is ridiculous. People smoke because they choose to smoke. There's no way to stop it.

  3. #3

    Default Re: Smoking in movies

    Then you misunderstand the power of marketing psychology.

  4. #4
    Patrick Guest

    Default Re: Smoking in movies

    So I guess kids pick up guns and kill their classmates because of video games too.

  5. #5

    Default Re: Smoking in movies

    I'm sure there are hundreds of thousands of teens that pick up their first cig cause they saw Brad Pitt smoking ...Wasn't because of peer pressure at all

  6. #6

    Default Re: Smoking in movies

    these kids that "see brad pitt smoking" and pick up a cigarette without peer pressure....where do they get the smokes??? duh, from their friends. you can't start smoking without peer pressure from your buddies. the only other place teens would get smokes is from parents or siblings and that's still a form of peer pressure.

  7. #7

    Default Re: Smoking in movies

    What about drinking? Shouldn't alcohol consumption be monitored, too?

  8. Default Re: Smoking in movies

    What's that statistic on kids who have parents who smoke? I think I read once that kids who have parents that smoke are much more likely to smoke themselves.

    I'm luckily the minority there.
    Still corrupting young minds

  9. #9

    Default Re: Smoking in movies

    Me as well...Have many vices, but one of my biggest objectives in life is to not be addicted to anything

    Other than my playstation I'm doing alright

  10. #10

    Default Re: Smoking in movies

    "Youth who have two parents who smoke are more than twice as likely as youth without smoking parents to become smokers. More than 6 million youth (23 percent) are exposed to secondhand smoke daily, and more than 10 million youth aged 12 to 18 live in a household with at least one smoker. "
    from Home - American Lung Association site

  11. #11

    Default Re: Smoking in movies

    What about drinking? Shouldn't alcohol consumption be monitored, too?
    Or stealing/crashing cars, or eating junk food, or using foul language...

    Amazing to me that the thought police will have hysterics over someone lighting up a cigarette in a movie because it might encourage a teenager to do the same, yet the suggestion that we limit the profligate sex and or violence in movies is "closed minded" because movies are a "reflection" of society. Its the ultimate gag-on-a-gnat/swallow-a-camel mentality.

    I guess it's all a matter of whose personal ox is being gored.

    -soonerdave

  12. #12

    Default Re: Smoking in movies




    here's an idea...why don't we teach our children to accept responsibility for their actions and that for everything in life there are consequences instead of trying to blame someone else such as movies, music, my parents, my teachers...blah blah blah whine whine whine

  13. Default Re: Smoking in movies

    Yay!
    Still corrupting young minds

  14. Default Re: Smoking in movies

    Quote Originally Posted by Easy180 View Post
    Me as well...Have many vices, but one of my biggest objectives in life is to not be addicted to anything

    Other than my playstation I'm doing alright
    "Sir, there is no such thing as a negative virtue." Winston Churchill

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