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How Many Times Are You Allowed To Use The F Word In A Pg-13 Rated Movie

Ne1 know the 1st PG-13 movie allowed to use the f-word?

You are only allowed to use th f word twice, and never in a sexual context. (Yuo can say f*** if you stub your toe, but not to express that you had sex with someone). In Secret Window they get around this by adding static to blank out most of the word when Johnny Depp yells "I guess you shuoldn't have f***ed him then.

Ne1 know the 1st PG-13 movie allowed to use the f-word?

You are only allowed to use th f word twice, and never in a sexual context. (Yuo can say f*** if you stub your toe, but not to express that you had sex with someone). In Secret Window they get around this by adding static to blank out most of the word when Johnny Depp yells "I guess you shuoldn't have f***ed him then.

What movies that are PG use the "F" word?

That definitely shouldn't be allowed. The other day I was watching "Casper the friendly ghost" and they said the B word frequently. I know in PG-13 movies u can only say the F word once.

How many times are you allowed to use the F word in a PG-13 rated movie?

Most I've seen is twice "Adventures in Babysitting," and I'm pretty sure that's the limit.

I think it's stupid though. I hate the effect they have on movies, I hate the PG-13 movies with one or two carefully placed F-word. Language usually doesn't bother me unless it's unnecessary or used in an awkward context. District 9 I'm fine with, but those carefully placed f-words, ugh.

Can you list any R-rated movies that don't use the f-bomb in the dialogue?

Rob Roy
The Patriot
Gladiator

Why couldn't movies use the F word back in the 1960s?

Hollywood was allowed to show excess violence, and sex scenes, and use every other swear word besides the f bomb.

For instance. 1969 midnight cowboy, had full on nudity, and sex scenes, and, and cursed every other word besides F***.

Same with the film "The wild bunch", it is considered to be the most violent Western movie. Whith alot of bloody shootouts, and nudity.

Another 1960s movie was "Easy Rider." Had cocaine and alot of scenes of them smoking pot, and as well as a sex scenes. And even used the middle finger "Which basically means f you"

Now it sounds like im over doing this. It does not ruin the movie for me at all. It just if people find the f word to vulgar back then. Then wouldn't they find that Bloody violence, nudity, and drug use more vulgar back then as well? Im just trying to understand that logic.

How many times can a PG-13 movie say the F-Word before it's rated R?

It used to be none. The use of that word made sure that a film would get the "R" but something happened. The MPAA (the rating organization) refuses to answer questions about how they rate films, so who knows today how films are rated?

Recently, there was a scathing editorial condemning the Jim Cary film "Yes Man" for it's PG-13 rating due to a scene involving oral sex with an old woman. This criticism is warranted. Surveys have shown that way too many teens today do not consider oral sex as sex at all!

Is there any movie after 2010 that doesn’t use the 'F' word?

So, basically every family movie ever made and more?And I assume you mean the slang ‘f’ word, because I don’t want you coming out and saying “haha, I meant fork/face/faeces/flat/fat/foot/fit”. Well, if you do, shit.Beauty and the BeastSing!The Boss BabyFantastic Beasts and Where to Find ThemMoanaThe Secret Life of PetsTrollsIce Age: Collision CourseThe LEGO Batman movieCaptain UnderpantsZootopiaFinding DoryMiss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar ChildrenThe Jungle BookAlice Through the Looking GlassYou might have noticed something.Frozen isn’t on the list!Oh god no, shut up.These are all movies from just 2016 and 2017. Only some of the movies from 2016 and 2017 on top of it.Well, you aren’t running out of movies without the ‘f’ word anytime soon.Source: IMDb: Family Feature Films (Sort by Title, asc)Check out more of them from the link given above.

Why does Hollywood have to throw the "F-word" into movies?

R rated movies sell far less well than pg-13. Look at the openning weekend records. Spiderman 2 which was PG 13 opened with $115 million. I believe Hannibal holds the record openning day record for an R rated movie at $58 million.

The highest movie on the list of top grossing movies of all time that has an R rating is the Passion of the Christ.

Of the top 100 films of all time top grossing only 7 have an R rating:
The Passion of the Christ
The Matrix Reloaded
Saving Private Ryan
Terminator 2: Judgement Day
The Exorcist
Gladiator
Pretty Woman

By lightly gazing over the list I count 17 movies that are probably rated G, more than double the number of R rated movies on the same list.

Some writers just believe they can either get away with it or they need it in that instance. I'd rather see a film where it is used sparingly than one in which it is used once. If you only drop the f-bomb once or twice you probably didn't need it in the first place.

Then there's movies like Scarface and Bad Santa which drop it very liberally. Watching them is quite funny, but you obviously realize there is no way you can use the word that much in real life.

In the end though it's just a word. I'd be more worried about the amount of mind numbing violence and gun battles children are exposed to than the f-bomb or any other x-word like the s-word or the c-word.

Why are Americans so concerned about the F word in movies?

Irene Colthurst pretty much has it right. The Westerners who established America weren't just puritanical in terms of sex; extreme temperance (almost an oxymoron itself, though a bit more complicated than that) was valued in every aspect of life, right down to the speech one uses. Certain slang terms of phrase that we may consider utterly harmless were viewed by Colonials as so abhorrent they'd even warrant legal punishment. The philosophy behind this was (and in some ways still is) that even the most innocuous deviation from proper speech leads to laziness and corruption. And frankly, if one looks at modern speech patterns, the founders weren't completely out of bounds with this view. They took it too far of course, but attempting to speech disciplined also keeps it as expressive as it can be, and that's something modern culture has forgotten.In other words, we diminish the beauty of the slang word "fuck" when we use it as a quasi-preposition with every other word.

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