Did you know that, while movie ratings were introduced in 1968, the PG-13 rating wasn't added until 1984? All of the movies released into the Marvel Cinematic Universe so far have been rated PG-13, but some moviegoers are saying that Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness is pushing that rating to its absolute limit, which writer Michael Waldron defended this week in a new interview with io9.
The Motion Picture Association reviews submitted films and rates them based on content, but these ratings are set by subjective people using evolving rules. Two people might rate a movie on the edge PG-13 and R, and two PG-13 films from two different eras might land very differently for a single viewer. Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness takes our mystical hero and a new friend, America Chavez, on a multiverse-hopping journey that has them meeting other Doctors Strange and visiting other versions of Earth, some quite different from ours.
During their adventure, the characters witness a swarm of angry souls attacking a character missing half their face. One hero is literally shredded to ribbons, ending with a genuinely shocking pop, and another is chopped in half, though the other half admittedly happens off-screen. Waldron pointed to both the film's director and past examples of PG-rated films as reasons why that PG-13 rating fits.
«I knew I was writing for Sam Raimi,» Waldron said. «So I tried to go there and Sam was happy to go there if it felt motivated by story and character.»
Sam Raimi is best known for directing the first Spider-Man trilogy that helped lay the groundwork for the modern cinematic superhero landscape, but his core work has always been horror, starting with Evil Dead in 1981 up through 2009's Drag
Read more on gamespot.com