A (R)ite of Passage With Your First R-Rated Movie

Remember your first R-rated movie?

For young movie fans, it’s a major rite of passage whether you see your first “Restricted” title on the big or small screen. At least it used to be. Who knows what's going on with those darn kids today?

As for me, I have very particular memories of first experiencing works branded “No One Under 17 Admitted Without Parent or Guardian” as a big deal on the big screen.

In fact, I not only remember seeing my first R-rated movie, I remember my first three.

Cable was around (and we had it) when I was a kid, but not cable as we understand it today, with hundreds upon hundreds of channels. I had the experience of those primitive multi-channel boxes: 12 push buttons in the center, one dial to the left to move you up and down between three levels. So: 36 channels.

(That still seems like more than enough channels to me, but I am already revealing too much about my age without sounding crotchety, so let’s just move on.)

Before crossing the barrier between PG and R in a movie theater (nope, no PG-13 around when that happened for me), I had certainly already “seen” some R-rated fare on cable. Meaning, Mom always rushed to cover my eyes during the offending scenes. One moment that stands out for me in this regard is a scene from the third Dirty Harry picture, The Enforcer.

In the film, Harry’s chasing People’s Revolutionary Strike Force bomber Henry Lee Caldwell across a San Francisco rooftop when the luckless militant falls through a skylight and smack into the midst of the action of a porno movie production. Harry jumps down to continue the chase and plows through the room, barely (ha) acknowledging the naked people scrambling around him.

My mother always figured her hand went up in front of my face just in time. Why would I bother convincing her otherwise?

There’s another memory I have of Cablevision Carnality that I will have to clear up someday because I haven’t seen the film in such a long, long time: I have a very strong, if completely fuzzy, recollection of seeing buttocks bared in extreme closeup...and, before I'd done a little reading to check my facts and discovered it was not rated R, I was certain it was the counterculture classic Billy Jack. The memory sticks out for me because I distinctly recall being alone in the house when I was watching it, whatever it was—“HBO will show this feature only at night” was gravely intoned before the start of such forbidden fare—which made the images feel all the more scandalous to me. Even now, my mind pictures that square TV screen filled side-to-side with enormous cheeks.

One day I mean to revisit the film to see if my recollection is correct, but I have a feeling I may have either a) the wrong film or b) a memory magnified to outrageous proportions, the result of some kind of guilt over my youthful indiscretion.

I was well shy of the age of 17, though, when my parents decided it was safe to usher me through the ticket booth to see my very first R-rated film: the 1979 remake of Dracula. I remember being so excited about the possibility of seeing it that I would call the box office over and over again just to listen to the theater’s recorded message, where they would announce the title, the screening times, and a little sound bite from the trailer. In this case, the movie theater was Newark, Delaware’s Cinema Center 3 (it still exists, the sole theater still standing from my childhood), and I can picture that deep voice on the answering machine that sent chills of anticipation up and down my spine after the wolf howl:

“Dracula. Rated R.

When the night came, I was given a final choice to make: Are you sure? Here’s your choice: We can see Dracula…or…The Muppet Movie.

You look back and realize: parents do have a sense of humor.

So, OK, as far as R-rated movies go, director John Badham's film turned out to be rather mild in terms of its content. You didn’t have nudity, but you had Kate Nelligan wearing a pretty revealing nightgown during a steamy, pre-bite makeout session with Count Frank Langella—photographed from some tantalizing angles; you saw a neck-snapping dispatch of Renfield far more ghastly than you were used to seeing on Saturday afternoons when the Lugosi classic aired on Dr. Shock; and, finally, you had quite a violent twist at the climax that did a decent job of shocking me as a longtime Dracula fan well acquainted with the details of the book.

(I won’t reveal it here in case someone out there may not be aware of it)

The monster movie Alien was the next R I racked up as a youngster. Obviously, my parents figured taking me to R-rated horror films would be “safer” than, say, taking me to see Caligula—but nobody was prepared for how strong “that” scene in the early going would be. Mom was too busy screaming to cover my eyes.

Again, here we’re talking about a film light on sexual content—we’re always more squeamish about sex than violence here in the U.S. (as I pointed out with my video store war story in What’s Taboo in the Movies Today?)—but heavy on disturbing amounts of gore and goo. I believe I was fairly well wigged out by Ian Holm's milky demise.

It was only a matter of time, however, before I would cross that particular ratings rubicon, and my Tour of Titillation will now climax—ahem—with a reminiscence of my parents taking me to the drive-in to see the John Boorman flick Excalibur.

Well, now we’re talking!

Maybe Mom and Dad thought I’d fall asleep before the film started—like the time I fell asleep at the drive-in the first time they took me to see Jaws (sadists both, they returned me to a movie theater to see it again, where I not only stayed awake, but was so traumatized by it I was nervous about going into the swimming pool, forget about the ocean)—but I was alert enough to get really squirmy during the film's extravagantly explicit opening minutes.

There’s just no way around it, it’s beyond odd watching sex scenes in the company of your parents…no matter how old you get. But in Excalibur, we’re not just talking about your run-of-the-mill lovemaking. No, we’re talking about a truly bizarre coupling brought to us by Boorman, the same auteur who gave us the charming backwoods rumpy-pumpy of Deliverance:

When Excalibur-wielding king Uther Pendragon (Gabriel Byrne) convinces Merlin (Nicol Williamson) to help him satisfy his lusts and bed Igrayne (Katrine Boorman), wife to the Duke of Cornwall (Corin Redgrave), he does so by having the wizard transform him into the spitting image of her husband, who is busy getting killed conducting a raid on Uther’s camp.

Cornwall is gruesomely impaled; his daughter senses the death of her father, but look, Igrayne says, there’s your father, back from battle! Thanks to Merlin’s magic, she’s unaware it’s Uther, who rips off her flimsy nightgown and has his way with her. Without removing his suit of armor. The film now launches into a truly disturbing montage of parallel action, Cornwall writhing in bloody agony even as Uther pounds against Igrayne in front of a roaring hellfire, composer Trevor Jones’ surreal accompaniment of wailing vocals and low, undulating strings taking command of the soundtrack.

While the little girl watches.

Talk about a weird way of being introduced to sex onscreen.

(Katrine Boorman, who plays Igrayne in the film, is director Boorman’s daughter, and that adds an extra layer of weirdness to the whole thing.)

By the time I had actually turned 17, seeing R-rated movies was old hat; I’d already seen my first R-rated movie on a date: Beverly Hills Cop. The first R-rated movie I saw away from home (that is to say, first semester college)? Witness.

I never quite recaptured that “scandalous” tingle again until I saw Peter Greenaway’s NC-17 nutter of a film The Cook, The Thief, His Wife, and Her Lover, which was dirty and weird enough to make you feel like you were getting away with something just by watching it and not getting arrested. Still, as a fully legal adult (old enough to vote and old enough to drink), I felt it didn’t pack the same emotional punch as those first glimpses of cinema skin.

By that point, we already had the video rental business in full swing, making it far easier to obtain truly racy fare like Pink Flamingos and Pieces, not to mention actual pornography—the viewing of which, frankly, also didn’t deliver the frisson that breaking that R barrier did for me so long ago.

(UPDATED: Blog and ye shall receive!) So much for tales of my first R-rated movies. The first R-rated movie, 1968’s The Split, starring Gene Hackman, appears to be currently unavailable  ready for you to order! The first film to ever receive an MPAA rating of any kind, Dracula Has Risen from the Grave, remains a title movie-loving completists can easily add to their video libraries.

 
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  • Blair Kramer.

    It was some time in the 60's and I may have been 12 or 13. Like most guys, I loved horror films. Of course, most horror films were pretty cheesy in those days, and those that weren't (the Hammer productions, f'rinstance) were few and far between. In any case, they were always low budget. Now... I don't know how this happened, but prior to the institution of film ratings, I wandered into a theater to view a grim, gruesome, bloody, horror movie that nearly traumatized my young self! Don't ask me the title of the film 'cuz I don't remember it. And in fact, I only remember one scene from the film. A young woman is tied to a cross within a steaming jungle. Some evil bastard strips her naked. Soon thereafter, an ugly monster approaches to promptly tear her limbs off! First her arms, then her legs! I was aghast! I hated it! It was just about the most awful thing I had ever seen! I guess that's why I never forgot that particular scene. But as I say, I don't remember the title of the God-awful film.

  • http://www.moviesunlimited.com George D. Allen

    What a great story :) I feel like I need to get this film identified at once!

  • jefferson_thomas

    "Hannie Caulder." Racquel Welch, Robert Culp and Ernest Borgnine. My friend Brian and I got to see it by simply not leaving the theater when the previous movie (a biography of Johnny Cash, of all things) ended. Good movie, of course, but why the R rating? There was nothing in it we didn't already know about! We enjoyed both the movie and the experience of "sneaking" in, but we both felt a little let down!

  • fred buschbaum

    Interesting for the various differences to the rating. My first was long ago...."The Outlaw" staring Jack Beutel and JANE RUSSELL. After that, I couldn't wait for another chance to sneak in. I recently viewed "the Outlaw" again, and realized what a poor film it was, wasting the talents of several good actors. And by todays standards not worth the "R".

  • Ani C.

    Trading Places.

  • Classic Movie Lover

    My first "R" rated movie was "Two Women" with Sophia Loren. In the 60's Los Angeles had a program called "Cinema 9" that aired on Channel 9 (KHJ-TV) Friday nights at 10 p.m. nights.

    I was almost years old and was supposed to be sleep. I watched the movie from the upstairs landing. I didn't understand the word rape. I thought they were saying "rake" and wondered why raking was so awful. LOL

    Remember George Putnam and Jerry (From the Desert to the Sea Good Evening) Dunphy?

  • Dave j

    I went to see Brigitte Bardot in, And God Created Woman in the late 1950's with a note from a parent. The only way you could get into what was then considered R rated films long before the rating system which is pretty much useless today.

  • Dana Rich

    My first "R" rated film was "The Trip" with Peter Fonda. I didn't even realize it was rated "R" until there came a scene with a woman dancing topless in it. You could hardly tell she was topless because it was in a 60's dance club with colored lights and images projected all over the walls. I just was curious about how they would portray an acid trip in a movie. No one tried to stop me going in the film (I was probably 12 or 13), and I certainly didn't tell my mother it was rated "R". I would still be grounded.

  • Nick

    "Farewell, My lovely" and "Three Days Of The Condor" both from 1975. I was a wee 13 back then...

    • Raymond

      "Three Days Of The Condor" was Robert Redford and Faye Dunaway and directed by Sidney Pollack from 1975 that was rated "R" for strong graphic violence,nudity,and some tough language.

      "Farewell My Lovely" starred Robert Mitchum as the tough private detective Mike Hammer that was very good when I saw this back in 1975,at the tender age of 11. It was also "R" rated for some strong language throughout,a brutal rape scene and for some really strong violent content(courtesy of Robert Mitchum taking out the bad guys and of course beating them to a bloody and senseless pulp).

      BTW: Robert Mitchum scored two very good movies that came out in 1975 that were in my book impressive....One of them was "Farewell My Lovely" with Charlotte Rampling...the other?
      The action-packed gangster drama "The Yakuza"(about the Japanese mafia) that also starred Brian Keith that was "R" rated for tons of graphic intense violence including the most infamous scene of a man being tortured to death by a samurai sword(body parts flying everywhere in the movie),and scenes of violent content that keeps you intense throughout. Shootouts galore with Mitchum bring his own justice!!! Worth seeing.

    • Raymond

      "Three Days of the Condor" came out in 1975 and was directed by the great Sydney Pollack and starred Robert Redford and Faye Dunaway.

      In 1975,Robert Mitchum had two great films that came out. One was "Farewell,My Lovely" with Charlotte Rampling that was Rated "R". Mitchum played the detective/private eye Mike Hammer.
      The other movie was the graphically violent 1975 gangster flick that Robert Mitchum was in was called "The Yakuza" about the Japanese mafia that also starred Brian Keith that was also Rated "R" for its infamous scene of a man being tortured by a samurai sword.

  • Bill K

    First movie I can think of that was rated R was probably either Animal House or Carrie.
    As a kid the worst I was allowed to see was PG. My first shocking movie moment back then was to hear the "Duke" swear on the big screen for the first time in the 1969 True Grit when he was facing Pepper's gang and said, "Fill your hands you son of a ......"!

    • Raymond

      Bill K:
      "Carrie" came out around Christmas of 1976.

      "Animal House" was released in mid-July of 1978.

      "True Grit" was released in July of 1969.

      • Raymond

        "True Grit" upon its release in July of 1969 was given a "M" rating upon its release. The picture was for Mature Audiences-Parental Guidance Suggested.

        "The Wild Bunch" which also came out around the summer of 1969,was rated "X". Was rated "R" in 1970 during one of its may re-releases.

  • John R.

    My first R-rated movie in a theater was "Thunderbolt and Lightfoot" starring Clint Eastwood and Jeff Bridges while visiting relatives when I was 13 yrs old. The film contained brief nudity. Two days later, I saw my second R-rated film, "Chinatown" starring Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway. As a freshman in high school, my brother and his friends took me along to see "Blazing Saddles" during a re-issue release (when a two-yr-old film would be re-released at a lesser price). The first R-Rated film I remember seeing after I turned 17 and could go on my own was "National Lampoon's Animal House". This was also the 1st movie which I drove myself to.

  • dave castellarin

    my very first R rated movie was REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE, i don't recall how i got in the theatre but i did, boy that was sure tame compared to to-day. oh, yes, LOVE ME TENDER with elvis was also rated R. unbeleivable isn't it??

  • LOU

    There were two movies. when I was a teenager, that I remember a priest announced from the pulpit that the congregation was forbidden to see. The first was "THE OUTLAW" and then later the forbidden movie to see was "THE MOON IS BLUE". There were more, but those are the two that I definitely know were forbidden. What tame movies they were compared to what are shown now.

  • Matt Gaffney

    Rosemary's Baby, 1969.

  • Terry Elston

    I don't understand some of these posts because a lot of these movies were released long before the ratings system began in the 60's (Love Me Tender for example). My first experience was when they used "M" for mature, before they started using "R". It was "Barbarella" with Jane Fonda. Unfortunately, I was a little to young to fully appreciate her "talents" but I will never forget it.

  • dave castellarin

    TERRY! the R rating was alive and well in the 50's and early 60's and it stood for; RESTRICTED ADULT and you where allowed in if accompanied by an adult. the two films i mentioned REBEL WITHOUT A CAUSE and LOVE ME TENDER had the R rating. i realise things have changed over the years and i totally respect your opinion but back then everyone and everything tried to protect our young minds from the real world something that the movie industry could not care less today. the ratings where ALWAYS there. trust me

  • GUNNY KOON USMC Ret

    "OK Bub, your F**Kin' Heads coming off this time" Aw... MASH!

  • http://www.moviesunlimited.com George D. Allen

    For any of you temporarily befuddled by the disagreements over when the movie ratings were started; or what was rated R first, or what the first movie was to receive any rating under the MPAA system--I refer you to the final paragraph of the piece (in italics). Past that, I refer you to the handy Wiki page on the movie ratings system:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motion_Picture_Association_of_America_film_rating_system

    The movie ratings (as we basically know them today) were not, in fact, always with us. Those started in 1968.

    Paranoid about Wiki-accuracy? Here's the '68 date affirmed by the MPAA's official site:
    http://www.mpaa.org/ratings/ratings-history

    As Dave mentioned, "they" were indeed trying to protect "us" from racy content in the movies, but they did it by way of the Hays Code, which was an altogether different mode of oversight, certainly worthy of its own lengthy exploration.

  • Shawn

    The Exorcist when I was in grammar school. I don't think I had perfect nights sleep for a couple years after that but the later R rated films in the 70's were not as bad after seeing that. I was shocked by that one scene in 'Alien' just like the writer of the article though. That sticks out in my mind.

  • Rob in L.A.

    My first three:

    "The Exorcist"
    "California Split"
    "The Gambler"

    My dad took me to the last two — he liked movies about gambling. I saw Robert Altman's "California Split" shortly after his movie "M*A*S*H" aired on TV, and so was born my first encounter with the concept of auteurism.

  • Susan W.

    1. The Howling
    2. American Werewolf in London.

    I was invited along with my older sister by our Mom to watch both movies at the Blue Ridge Cinema. During American Werewolf the "Dr. Pepper" guy is shown running through a London park totally nude after waking up from a night as a werewolf thus no clothes. I remember exclaiming out loud in the theatre at the tender age of 16 "Men have hair there??" It was a memorable experience. Amazingly, a year or two before, I wasn't allowed to see the James Bond flick MOONRAKER at the Cinema due to it being PG!

  • http://www.moviesunlimited.com George D. Allen

    Susan W, I love the "American Werewolf..." and "Moonraker" stories! :) That Bond was the first I saw in the theater (after getting instantly hooked by watching "The Spy Who Loved Me" on cable; my mother took me as I recall, and I was feeling pretty awestruck and grown-up (plus a little squirmy, since I was with my mother) during the usual saucy 007 title sequence of (barely) silhouetted nudes floating across the screen...

  • Colin W.

    The first two "R" rated movies I can recall viewing: "Dirty Harry" and "Death Wish"... I remember vividly the rape scene from "Death Wish".. quite shocking to my 13 year old brain..

  • DrDave

    Blazing Saddles, 1974. Talk about tame by modern standards...

  • jeanine

    I was an adult before the current system was in place. I did go to see the X rated Midnight Cowboy. It was an excellent film. I have it in my collection, but I really believe because of the sexual content and violence it deserved the X. The rating did not stop me from seeing it. I am disappointed that it was changed to an R. By changing it the ratings lost their meaning.

  • Anita

    One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest in 1975. I was 14 and my sister and her boyfriend took me. I felt really grown up and laughed a lot.

  • Rupert Palmer

    Censorship was alive and well in Australia in the 1960s. However, the hottest film I saw in that period that got past the vigilant censors was a German movie called Call Girls. I remember seeing it about 4 times. I have tried to locate it several times recently without success. It would no doubt be regarded as tame by contemporary standards but if anyone has heard of it and its availability I should be grateful for the information.

  • William Arthur Grove

    My first R movie in theaters was Dirty Harry in 1972. I was 15. I believe the movie mentioned first was called Brides of Blood with John Ashley from 1968. It was a Filipino film. It's part of The Blood Collection, used to be sold by MU.

  • Blair Kramer.

    Thanks Mr. Grove. Assuming you're correct about the title of the film I described, AND assuming the year was 1968, then I was definitely older than 13 at the time (to say the least!). But it was quite a few years ago and, as such, I think I may be forgiven if my memory of the experience is just a bit inaccurate. Be that as it may, there remains one fact of which I am certain. The film I saw was/is despicable!

    So George...
    Can you confirm Mr. Grove's info? Do you know if "Brides Of Blood" contains the awful scene that I described?

  • Vickie

    Midnight Cowboy at the drive-in. I'm pretty sure it had been knocked back to R by then.

  • Jim Silverthorn

    36 channels! We had 3 (yes, three) when I was a kid. ABC, CBS, NBC. Boy, am I showing my age.So, of course, I remember when movie ratings came out. I was 21 in 1969 and that made me old enough to see Midnight Cowboy. Rated "X"!!! I don't think it would get an R today. PG-13 probably

  • http://www.moviesunlimited.com George D. Allen

    Blair K, it would appear that W.A. Grove has given you the title you seek! I took a gander at the box art (yep, we have a few copies in stock!) http://www.moviesunlimited.com/musite/product.asp?sku=D36681
    Indeed, there is a naked gal tied to wooden stakes and there's a toothsome beastie bearing down on her!

    The tagline(s) for the film: "A Brutal Orgy of Ghastly Terror! Sacrificed To The Non-Human Creature!"

    UPDATE: Yes, this is absolutely the right movie. The trailer is here:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b5ZwSQFuIZ4

    This looks like a positively delightful picture that I may have to watch, and soon. :)

    Rupert P, whether you are referring to the 1957 "Call Girls" (aka "Call of the Flesh") or possibly 1966's "Playgirls of Frankfurt," both apppear to be sadly MIA.

  • Blair Kramer.

    Just watched the trailer for "Brides Of Blood!"

    ICK!!!

    Say George... A while back, someone talked about movies we would like to make disappear! I nominate "Brides Of Blood!"

    Finally, I honestly don't think the name of the actress truly is "Beverly Hills!"

  • Blair Kramer.

    By the way... How did they get away with showing so much nudity in a trailer? Was it only supposed to be seen in the Philippine islands? And if so, how did I get a chance to see the film itself in a movie theater in a big American city?

  • DDK

    I'm not sure what my first "R" movie was. But I do remember my first time seeing a full frontal male nude. Richard Gear in American Gigolo. There were gasps of surprise from quite a few people in the audience

  • Mark Lovejoy

    In "Billy Jack," IIRC there ws a scene of a guy @ George Allen: (adult) making love with a 13 year old. Billy breaks up the action by walking in. He asks the girl how old she is, she tells him, and he says "Get outta here." She does, holding up the blanket to her body and she's shown from behind walking away before Billy knocks the guy out with one punch or chop. Maybe that's the scene you're thinking of?

  • http://www.moviesunlimited.com George D. Allen

    Eeee-yikes! Well that might be it. Eventually I will get around to confirming (or disposing of) this fuzzy memory. It's just a matter of deciding if I will bring home "Billy Jack" by itself (re-issued on Blu-ray recently) or go the Full Billy Jack with the multi-disc box set on DVD of the entire counterculture epic, since my library sadly lacks either. But thanks for coming to my rescue in the meantime :)

  • John Small

    My first R-rated movie was the 1981 remake of "Tarzan The Ape Man" with Bo Derek. Man, was I disappointed! It was a crappy Tarzan movie and Do Derek didn't nearly as much for me as all my buddies who had seen her in "10" had led me to believe. A complete waste all the way around...

  • Susan

    When the rating system that is in place today was in its infancy, there was a lot of certainty as to what constituted an X rating. But it became fuzzy between PG or an R. Pretty soon things became a little loose with regard to violence, but remained stringent with regard to sex. There was joke that went around late night TV. If someone showed a woman's bare breast, the movie got an R. If someone hacked it off with a sword, it got a PG.

  • Debbie Coley

    My first R-rated movie was "The Sting".

    • Raymond

      Debbie Coley:
      "The Sting" upon its release in 1973 was rated "PG".
      "PG"-Parental Guidance Suggested-Some Material May Not Be Suitable for Pre-Teenagers.

  • bill robinson

    My first R movie came before there was such a thing as R movies. In 1953, in the army, I got stationed in France, where there was a rating system , which there was not here. It was two-part. Movies forbidden to those under 16 and the rest okay for everyone. The ones forbidden to those under 16 were all American gangster movies and westerns, in other words movies filled with violence. French movies with bare breasts and buttocks were okay for everyone. In fact, the ad for one sex comedy filled with nudity was "forbidden to those over 16." We still haven't caught up.

  • Sammi

    I was born in 1982 and my first r rated movie was Child's Play. I was only six, so the film traumatized me. I could never look at my dolls the same again. After that, it was The Terminator and Aliens. Both films scared me, but nothing compared to Chucky!

    • Raymond

      Sammi:

      1988 had two of the biggest movies of that year.
      "Child's Play", and the action-packed spectacle
      "Die Hard". I saw "Child's Play" while I was in college,and it was impressive. I didn't care for the sequels.
      Scary? yes for an "R" rated film.

  • Chris

    The first movie I saw was the classic Al Pachino Scarface back in 1980 I think it was. My father wanted to see if thr rumored scenes in the movie especially the chainsaw scene were true. So the whole family went out for an afternoon movie.

    It was also the first movie I saw that had an intermission in the middle of it because of how long the movie was.

    Also was one of the last movies I saw at A single screen theater. Most are multiplexes these days tose were the days.

  • Raymond Caple

    FYI: Debbie Coley
    "The Sting" in 1973 was rated "PG"-Parental Guidance Suggested. Some Material May Not Be Suitable for Children. It was not an "R" rated film,but it was almost one due to scenes of violent content and some strong language.

    My parents when I was about 6 or 7 years old took me and my brother at the local drive-in theatre to see "Billy Jack" with Tom Laughlin. It's original rating was rated "GP"-Meaning that all ages were admitted,but Parental Guidance is Suggested for several scenes of incest and rape,strong language and violent content. And this was back around 1971 or 1972. And it was re-released in 1973 when it was given to "PG" rating. The kung-fu scenes were Laughlin fights off the police officers was very good,but the rest of it I couldn't understand.

  • Raymond Caple

    The first "R" rated movie I saw when I was about 6 or 7 years old with my parents was the 1972 movie "Lady Sings The Blues" starring Diana Ross,Billy Dee Williams,and Richard Pryor. The movie was produced by Berry Gordy and directed by Sidney J. Furie and it was based on the life of the great Blues vocalist Billie Holliday. That movie scared the daylights out of me and my brother when we saw this "adult" feature with our parents. This was an "R" rated movie that contains a lot of graphic scenes,including one shocking scene of a violent lynching of a man from a tree. Another was the scene where Diana Ross' character was shooting heroin in her arms and from there went into complete hysterics that shocked the audience,and really scared me. For a movie that ran over two hours,I fell asleep on some of it. "Lady Sings The Blues" was the picture that was Nominated for 8 Oscars including Best Picture,Best Director,and Best Actress(Diana Ross who became the second black actress since Dorothy Dandridge to be nominated for an Academy Award)

  • Raymond Caple

    I saw Al Pacino's classic gangster movie "Scarface" too. The movie was released in December of 1983,and it was not released in 1980. I oughta know. I saw "Scarface" opening weekend in December of 1983 with an capacity crowd(not bad for a Saturday matinee audience). "Scarface" was Rated "R"-Under 17 Requires Accompanying Parent or Adult Guardian. In the ads for the movie stated: WARNING-This movie contains scenes that maybe be too intense for those under 17 years of age. Reason? The infamous chainsaw scene which is TRUE!(Not for the squeamish or the weak of heart),not to mention explicit drug use,and tons of violent content which was at the time very controversial and very graphically violent which this movie had the number of people being killed off within its 171 minute running time.

  • Raymond Caple

    "Porky's" in 1981 was Rated "R" was the first movie I took my girlfriend to see and we holla laughing in the aisles. The scene with Kim Cattrell is a classic! The sex sequence where she howls in heat..

  • Raymond Caple

    John Small,
    I saw "Tarzan:The Ape Man" too in 1981 when I was in high school and it was Rated "R"-Under 17 Requires Accompanying Parent or Adult Guardian. Due to the scenes of full frontal nudity,violence,and whatever else that made occur. This movie brought back the "Tarzan" franchise in theatres for the first time in 13 years(the last "Tarzan" movie starred Mike Henry back in 1968),and not only was it a disappointment,but it became one of the worst movies of the 1980's. Miles O'Keefe was the worst "Tarzan" EVER! And a LOT of people were going to see more of Bo Derek here,but we were totally wrong! I saw this a a twin theatre,where another "R" rated movie played next door called "S.O.B." that was directed by Blake Edwards,and features Julie Andrews half naked(yes,showing tits and all),and was the better movie.

  • Raymond Caple

    The second "R"-rated film I saw when I was about 11 or 12 years old was "Which Way Is Up?" Starring Richard Pryor in 1977. Yes,it was funny as hell for a "R" rated movie with Pryor cussing all over the place(strong persuasive graphic language)along with scenes of actress Lonetta McKee's full frontal nudity(showing tits,bush,and ass). The soundtrack to this movie was good too from a one hit wonder girl group of the mid-1970's called "Starpoint" singing the title song. I saw this movie around Christmas time at the twin theatre,where on the other side played "Close Encounters of the Third Kind",which was Rated "PG".

  • Raymond Caple

    First "R"-rated blaxploitation movie I saw as a child was a forgotten 1972 western called "The Legend of Mister Charley". The movie starred none other than Fred Williamson as a runaway slave who goes out on the Old West and gets to settle the score with the sadistic slaveowner who ran him through hell in the South. Not a bad blaxploitation western which includes scenes of a man's bare back and ass getting whipped,and some of the most graphic violent scenes ever committed to film. But at the end,Fred Williamson kills his sadistic master and wins his freedom. The sequel to this "The Soul of Mister Charley" from 1973 was even more violent as the "R"-rated envelope is pushed even more to the brink.

  • Susan

    As an adult without children when the new R rating and present day rating system was put into place, I don't remember what film was my first R rated venture. But in do remember that when I saw Midnight Cowboy its rating had been changed from an X to an R. It felt like it was very daring to be seeing something that would have shamed the nuns who taught us catechism. Sister Mary Joseph would still be breathlessly praying for my doomed soul if she knew that I loved Joe Buck and Ratso Rizzo.

  • Raymond Caple

    The other "R" rated movie that I saw as a child was the 1975 movie "Mandingo". Yes,there was a movie called "Mandingo" that came out in the summer of 1975,directed by Richard Fleischer,and starring
    James Mason, Susan George, Perry King, Yaphet Kotto,
    and making his debut former boxing champ Ken Norton.
    Also starring in this film too was Paul Benedict,for those who may not know this British actor was better known for his television work as Mr. Bentley on the CBS-TV series "The Jeffersons".
    Getting back to "Mandingo",this was a movie that shocked its audience in 1975,and as a 11-year old who went to see this movie with his uncle and aunt before a capacity crowd on a Sunday afternoon matinee,this was a movie that REALLY pushed the envelope for a "R"-rated movie. Scenes featuring full frontal nudity,graphic violent content and its infamous scene of a black man hanging upside down in a barn fully naked while getting whupping across the butt with a paddle while is bare bottom is dripping blood by a sadistic slaveowner was sheer terror. Not to mention the steamy and graphic sex scenes between Ken Norton and Susan George. "Mandingo" was the pre-ROOTS and Gone With The Wind turned into a madhouse of sheer terror. It pissed a lot of people off who went to see it,and for a movie that shocked its audience,it was given a very hard
    "R" rating.

    • raysson

      Speaking of the 1975 film MANDINGO,there is that infamous scene where a slave is being whipped by his sadistic master while being hung upside down fully naked while his master beats the crap out of him with a wooden paddle across the buttocks while the slave is bleeding badly from his behind. Being an 11-year old who saw this film when it was in theaters back in the summer of 1975 with my uncle,it pushed the envelope for it's strong and controversial material which shocked audiences who went to see it. Yes, it was indeed rated "R" for a reason.

      • http://www.moviesunlimited.com George D. Allen

        Raymond! I continue to thoroughly enjoy the relish with which you describe the R-rated contents of your favorite R-rated films.

        It makes me a little hesitant to write anything about X-rated fare, that's for sure :)

        Meanwhile, I'd be interested to see you add to your "Shaft" observations with some appraisal of how well you felt Jackson filled Shaft's shoes.I recall exiting the theater pretty let down by the "Shaft" redux.

  • Raymond Caple

    "Slaughter",which was a full action-packed 1972 blaxploitation movie starring former NFL-great Jim Brown,along with Stella Stevens,Cameron Mitchell that was rated "R" for full frontal nudity,strong sexual content(including the steamy sex scenes with Jim Brown and Stella Stevens),not to mention the strong graphic violence throughout. Not to mention the movie soundtrack from Billy Preston. Not a bad action movie. It was followed by the 1973 sequel "Slaughter's Big Rip Off" that was also rated "R" and had none other than Ed McMahon(yes that Ed McMahon of The Tonight Show and Star Search fame)playing a big time drug lord syndicate who is out for blood against Slaughter(Jim Brown). Interesting piece.

  • Raymond Caple

    "On Her Majesty's Secret Service" starring George Lazenby(who became the second actor to play 007 agent James Bond after Sean Connery)which had scenes of violent content along with strong language that gave it an "M" rating-For Mature Audiences-Parental Guidance Suggested. In fact,it was Lazenby first and only attempt at playing agent 007. Connery would return to the role in 1971 for his final appearance in "Diamonds Are Forever" which was rated "GP"-All Ages Admitted,but Parental Guidance Suggested

  • Raymond Caple

    In 1969,two motion pictures made history as being the first to given the "X" rating by the Motion Picture Association of America. One was Sam Peckinpah's graphically violent western "The Wild Bunch" starring William Holden, Ernest Borgnine,
    Warren Oates, Robert Ryan, Edmund O'Brien, and Jamie Sanchez. It was known for its graphic violent scenes,some nudity and a lot of rough language,the 1969 film "The Wild Bunch" shocked audiences who went to see it. In 1970,the rating changed from "X" to "R" during its re-release.

    The second film to be "X" rated was "Midnight Cowboy". The only "X" rated movie to win the Oscar in 1969 for Best Picture,Best Original Score,and Best Director. Reason may be tamed be standards today,but in 1969,this film was a storm of controversy with it scenes of sexual content,graphic strong language,and one of the first films to feature homosexual content in a frank and daring way. I seen "Midnight Cowboy" once while during a midnight screening in college in the original "X" rated version(before the rating became synomous with porn). In 1970 and 1972 it was Rated "R" during its re-release. This was the movie that brought Jon Voight to light and made him a international superstar.

  • Raymond Caple

    "Mandingo" in 1975 almost ended up being an "X" rated film before studio heads and the powers that be at Paramount Pictures began cutting back on some of the more graphic stuff to toned it to an "R" rating. But still,it shocked audiences who went to see it. Released in August of 1975.

    • raysson

      The sequel to MANDINGO.....1976's DRUM
      Even pushed the envelope further for what was to come.

      From the ad-tagline:
      "MANDINGO" was the fuse....."DRUM" was the explosion!

      Rated R

  • jrd

    My rite of passage came when I was 20. It was The Omen in 1976. I've seen fewer than 10 R movies in my lifetime because I usually wait for movies to air on television, and of course they are edited.

  • http://www.moviesunlimited.com George D. Allen

    Raymond C, thanks for your great selection of R-rated memories. "Porky's" on a first date--wow. Meanwhile, I also appreciated the mentions of the "Slaughter" pictures and "Mandingo," which I've always been interested in checking out. :)

  • Randy Dannenfelser

    Zabriskie Point.
    Less than an hour after the film ended, my wife's water broke and the following day our first son was born.
    There's a connection there somewhere, but I'll be darned if I can find it...

  • Raymond Caple

    John Boorman's 1972 terror flick "Deliverance" based on John Dickey's novel about a band of men vacationing and kayaking along the river in the no man's land where they're stalked and terrorize by sadistic hillbillies. This movie was "R" rated for a reason...one was the infamous scene where Ned Beatty's character is forced to take off his clothes in the middle of the woods,and is brutally tortured and raped by a bunch of sadistic rednecks,while Jon Voight's character is tied up in the woods to be their next victim. Burt Reynolds'character steps in and saves them from a certain fate when he shoots an arrow straight into the neck of the sick bastard who tried to rape him in the woods.Shocking for its day.this was one of the most frank and graphic scenes ever committed to film. "Deliverance" was not for the weak of heart and it was very scary too,letting you know just when you thought it was safe to go into the woods.

  • Raymond Caple

    "Dracula Has Risen From The Grave" upon its release in 1968 was rated "M"-Mature Audiences,Parental Discretion is Strongly Advised.

    And it was due to some very graphic scenes.

  • http://www.moviesunlimited.com George D. Allen

    Raymond C, I enjoyed your chronicle of that infamous scene from "Deliverance" (which I referred to and comically sanitized as "rumpy pumpy"), but I must amend your "Dracula" history a little. The third in the Hammer-Chris-Lee Dracula series was actually given a "G" rating upon its release. Sounds nutty I know, but it's true. :)

  • Raymond Caple

    I also remember seeing CRUISING with Al Pacino upon it's release in 1980. This movie was directed by the great William Friedkin(who was also responsible for "The French Connection",
    "The Boys In The Band",and "The Exorcist" to name a few),and it was of the all-time underrated Pacino movies,even though it REALLY pushed to envelope for an "R" rated movie in 1980,with explicit scenes of graphic sexual content,nudity, strong persuasive language and acts of sodomy(and with Al Pacino?)involving a great deal of homosexuality that shocked it audiences upon its release.

  • Raymond Caple

    I remember when I was in high school got to see a Saturday Matinee screening of the 1982 movie titled MAKING LOVE that was directed by Arthur Hiller,and starred Michael Ontkean, Harry Hamlin, and Kate Jackson(yes,that Kate Jackson who was known for her work on television shows like "The Rookies",and "Charlie's Angels" to name a few and one of the few theatrical releases that she starred in),and it featured a theme song done by none other than Roberta Flack. I do remember the music composed by legendary maestro Leonard Rosenman. This was a HUGE controversial movie that shocked its audiences upon it's release in 1982. I do remember very well that it was Rated "R" for strong and graphic sexual content,full frontal nudity,strong language with graphic acts of sodomy(especially for its infamous gay love scene with Michael Ontkean and Harry Hamlin). This was the movie that sparked a lot of riots and protest against gays upon its release in theatres(in which some theatres even banned it from showing this) in 1982,and was one of the few "gay" movies that really pushed the envelope in terms of it's frank and graphic subject matter.

  • Raymond Caple

    In 1972,the first full length animated ADULT cartoon FRITZ THE CAT,I saw during a midnight screening in college during the mid-1980's.

    The tagline: "We're Not Rated X For Nothing!"

    Along with the double bill,which was also ADULT animated THE NINE LIVES OF FRITZ THE CAT,that was in fact Rated "R" for scenes involving cartoon animals having sex and doing all sorts of things that really pushed the envelope for a movie that ran 78 minutes in length.

  • http://www.moviesunlimited.com George D. Allen

    Raymond C, I must say, I love your continuing dedication to this very specific topic :) Per your "Fritz the Cat" reference, if you were not aware of it already, Fritz creator Robert Crumb was quite displeased with the adaptation of his work. Watch the excellent documentary on him (titled, aptly enough, "Crumb"), for his hilarious remarks about the Fritz film and many other fabulous insights about the man and his work.

    Plus, I'm so glad you mention "Cruising." I was contemplating doing a piece about that for quite a while. I did write a post awhile back called "Cruising," but that was about....something else.

  • Mark

    "Equus", an incredibly exploitive gay film with Peter Firth constantly shown full frontally naked. The talentless wooden film actor Richard Burton looked ancient, I wish he had died of lung cancer like his friend Sir Stanley Baker.

  • http://www.moviesunlimited.com George D. Allen

    Mark -- apart from your grotesquely cruel remark about Richard Burton, I might be curious to know exactly why/how you fixate on "Equus"--play or movie--as a categorically "gay" story.

    Well, then again, maybe I'm not so curious.

    You wouldn't be the first to see "Equus" this way, I should probably concede, but I do believe that labeling it that way represents an awfully limited (if not weirdly reactionary) reading of the text.

    The story, to my way of thinking, is a lot more about the fallout that can come when abusive religiosity gets in the way of a person's healthy attitudes towards sex of any kind. There's nothing in the script on the surface that brands Alan Strang as gay, as I recall; I guess some people see either that his worship of Nugget is purposefully symbolic, or, worse yet, a literal analog to homosexuality.

    Whether you see it as "gay" for those reasons or you are just reacting to seeing a lot of full frontal male nudity on the screen, I don't know. I'll say thanks for chiming in, but I'll also add once more that I find your comment about Burton to be a real shame.

  • Raymond Caple

    I do recall another movie starring Richard Burton too and it also starred Lee Marvin called "The Klansman' that came out around Christmas of 1974.
    It was directed by Samuel Fuller,and it also starred Linda Evans(of "The Big Valley",and "Dynasty" fame through some my know Miss Evans for her television work),and O.J. Simpson,yes,that O.J. Simpson. "The Klansman" maybe tame by today's standards,but in 1974 it spark a lot of controversy in the theatres. The was a movie that was went it came out a HUGE boxoffice flop upon it's release. This was a movie that was full of racial tension with the "N" word constantly used throughout,not to mention the infamous lynching scene and some strong intense graphic violence and rough language and not to mention the infamous rape scene featuring Linda Evans and her male co-star,yes the only picture was Miss Evans is fully nude. And this was the ONLY film Richard Burton and Lee Marvin ever starred in. I do recall that this picture was Rated "R"-Under 17 Requires Accompanying Parent or Adult Guardian.

    I do recall reading some interesting stuff about this picture during production where Richard Burton's temper and heavy drinking on the set got the best of him with his confrontation with director Samuel Fuller and the huge fight on the set with another hot headed heavy-drinker troublemaker himself,Lee Marvin. And to make matters worse the filming of the picture on location in parts of the South(using locations like Alabama, Louisiana, Georgia, and Mississippi)

  • Raymond Caple

    BLAZING SADDLES

    The third highest grossing film of 1974.

    Also was Rated "R"-Under 17 Requires Accompanying Parent or Adult Guardian For Strong Language,Mild Nudity and Violence.

    Talk about tame by today's standards. When this movie came out in 1974,it was indeed very racist.
    The "N" word is consistently used throughout the picture along with stereotyping minorities along with the infamous scene of the cowboys eating beans around the campfire. Not to mention that was a comedy that really push the envelope in terms of sheer laughs. Not to mention its infamous "gay" chorus scene towards the end.

    Cleavon Little became famous because of this movie,and his career should have taken off. With Slim Pickens, Harvey Korman, Madeline Khan, and Mel Brooks(who produced and directed it)with a screenplay written by Andrew Bergman and Richard Pryor(yes,that Richard Pryor) who was originally offer the role by Brooks himself,but the powers that be at Warner Brothers,who was behind the film refused to have Pryor on board due to his infamous drug habit.

    FYI: Did you know that this film is still showed on the midnight circuits as a late show in some theatres. "Blazing Saddles" is the second longest-running continuing movie that is still running in the theatres. The longest-running feature to play in theatres and its still going? 1975's The Rocky Horror Picture Show.

    • Raymond

      Not only THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW continues to run as a midnight venue at some theaters(which to this day here in the Raleigh-Durham,the ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW continues to play as a late show in the area,and has been since 1989!!!--even though it came out in 1975),but also
      "BLAZING SADDLES"-(1974)
      "MONTY PYTHON AND THE HOLY GRAIL"-(1975)
      "PINK FLOYD'S THE WALL"-(1982)
      "FRITZ THE CAT"-(1972)
      "CASABLANCA"-(1942)-the 2nd longest running late show hit
      "WIZARDS"-(1977)
      "ANIMAL HOUSE"-(1978)
      "NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD"-(1968)
      "ENTER THE DRAGON"-(1973)

  • Raymond Caple

    1972's STANLEY

    About a Vietnam Veteran who lives in the Florida Everglades with his special kind of pet, a venomous rattlesnake that he uses to kill his enemies who did him wrong.

    I do recall that this film upon its release in 1972 was "R" rated,and there are several strong scenes of sheer graphic violence that had audiences running out of the cinema during some showings. The infamous swimming pool scene where a villain dives in with Stanley and his snakes of death waiting to strike him in the water is NOT for the squeamish or faint of heart. It was Rated "R" for a reason

  • Raymond Caple

    "EQUUS"-Once its release was Rated "R" for scenes of full frontal nudity and strong intense graphic violence and the infamous scene that was also borderline for an "X" rating. Talk about a movie that pushed the envelope towards it audiences in 1977,the same year that gave us "Star Wars".

    By 1977,Richard Burton's career was basically coming to an end,but his performance here is brilliant. I saw it while I was in college. I heard there are 2 versions to this movie,I don't know that it's true,but is there a "R" or "Unrated" version of "Equus" floating around?

  • http://www.moviesunlimited.com George D. Allen

    Raymond C, another set of interesting R-rated anecdotes :) It's been awhile since I've watched "Saddles"--I wonder how many people today would think of it as "racist" rather than "about" racism.

    "Stanley"--thanks for mentioning that one. Never saw it, and am definitely eager to do so.

    Ah, "Equus"--I wasn't aware of talk about a different version of the movie. And as for Burton, his performance in "1984"--his last movie--is not particularly well thought of, but I find it pretty chilling.

  • raysson

    DIRTY HARRY

    Released December 24,1971.

    Talk about tame by today's standards. But when this movie came out around Christmas of 1971,it set the bar for what was to come among conventional hard police dramas. And for a movie that was in fact "R" rated,it had one of the best lines in the history of cinema.....

    "This is a 44-Mangum...the most powerful handgun in the world and it will blow your head clean off.
    I know what you're thinking,does it fired five shots or six? Do you feel lucky? Well you da punk?"

    The movie that cemented Clint Eastwood's career for the next five decades to come. DIRTY HARRY became a runaway hit and it spawned four sequels:
    "MANGUM FORCE"(which was also released 12/24/1973)
    "THE ENFORCER"(released in the summer of 1976)
    "SUDDEN IMPACT"(released in December of 1983),and the final DIRTY HARRY film "THE DEAD POOL"(which was released in August of 1988).

    If you're think of another Clint Eastwood cop thriller THE ROOKIE which Charlie Sheen that was part of the DIRTY HARRY series that was released in 1990,you're dead wrong. It wasn't. But it has Clint Eastwood as a veteran cop along with his partner-in-training Charlie Sheen going up against a female drug lord(Sonia Braga).

    • Raymond

      Correction:

      DIRTY HARRY was released in theatres on December 21,1971.
      NOT December 24th. Clarifying corrections.

      Within a week of its release,the film became one of the top ten films of the year,and gross more than $50 million at the box-office. The film was so successful,it spawned four sequels,making Clint Eastwood one of the biggest icons of the 1970's. And still is to this day.

      • http://www.moviesunlimited.com George D. Allen

        Raymond, greetings again in the Rated R thread! Many thanks for your continuing contributions...I feel like we could compile all of your commentary and make an entirely new article (or two, or three!) :)

        Now then, if you haven't seen it, and since you brought up "Dirty Harry," I will recommend the fantastic (and R-rated!) 2007 film "Zodiac" directed by David Fincher, dealing with the real-life murder case that inspired the creation of Callahan's nemesis "Scorpio." There's a brilliant scene in the film where the lead detective on the case (played fabulously by Mark Ruffalo) stalks out of a screening of the Don Siegel film.

  • raysson

    I SPIT ON YOUR GRAVE......

    I have seen this once back in the mid-1980's when I was in college. This 1978 revenge flick has some of the most graphic scenes ever committed to film,and for an "R" rated movie it even pushed the envelope further in terms of its frank and explicit content including some shocking scenes.
    The infamous rape scene,and not to mention the scene where the main character hacks off the part of a man's blank is NOT for the squeamish or faint of heart. A movie that will make you THINK twice when you confront a total stranger out of nowhere that may do some total harm,even if its a beautiful woman out for revenge against the men who done her wrong.

  • http://www.moviesunlimited.com George D. Allen

    raysson, Thanks for the memories! "The Dead Pool" makes me sad, it's SO not in the league of the 1st four Harry pictures, what with Harry turning into Philo Beddoe with the T-shirt brawling...and that remote control car. Eastwood has vowed never to make another Dirty Harry, but (yes, even now), I think he could pull it off with the right kind of story. If not, I'll always think of "Tightrope" and "Gran Torino" as my favorite unofficial evolutions of the Harry saga.

    I remember enduring "I Spit..." on home video. I found it to be pretty grimy and repulsive, but pretty boring at the same time. I never went back to revisit it, so it's been many, many years since I've seen it. I get tempted, but then I think....why bother, when there are so many other movies yet to be seen.

  • raysson

    Francis Ford Coppula's 1972 epic THE GODFATHER.
    Released in theatres on March 16,1972,but released in theatres elsewhere the following week as a general release. Did you know that 2012 will be celebrating its 40th Anniversary?

    This was a movie that became the all-time gangster epic and it set the bar for what was to come when it came to gangster films. THE GODFATHER was the essential movie of the 1970's when the American style of cinema was at its apex.
    I do recall seeing this movie when I was in college back in the 1980's. But when this movie came out in 1972,I was about 6 years old and I was not allowed to see it until years later.

    This was the movie that brought back one of the greatest actors of our generation...THE GODFATHER was Marlon Brando's triumphant comeback,and deservedly so this movie won Oscars for Best Picture and Best Director. The highest grossing film of that year. This was the movie that REALLY launched the careers of Al Pacino, James Caan, and Diane Keaton. This was a film that was explicitly violent in terms of several scenes that shocked its audiences who saw it in the theatres back in 1972 and those who saw it again during one of its re-releases. Several scenes stick out;the scene of the headless horse on the bed. The graphically violent scene where James Caan's character is gunned down in a hail of bullets;the car bomb explosion. This movie was in fact Rated "R" for a reason due to some strong language,intense explicit graphic violence throughout including the number of bad guys and others within the mafia who get killed off within it's 175 minute running time. It's sequel from 1974,"THE GODFATHER:PART II",set the bar for what was to come including Al Pacino's character rise to power within the Corleone family.

  • raysson

    EMANUELLE...

    A unknown actress by the name of Sylvia Kristel became an international sensation because of this movie when it came out in 1974. However,there are two versions of this film. When it was released,it was "X" rated due to some disturbing scenes relating to some graphic sexual content,full frontal nudity,and several acts of sodomy(that you won't see in the "R" rated version that came out during one of it's re-releases). These movies were the unexpected and it has become one of the most erotic series in all of cinema with several actresses who played the role(in course all of these films were shown in their "Unrated" versions).

  • raysson

    SHAFT

    I was not allowed to see this movie in the theatres when it came out in 1971,but have seen it years later. The Ultimate blaxploitation movie that made Richard Roundtree a huge megastar,not to mention Issac Hayes' Oscar winning score(one of the all-time greats)

    From the advertisement in the tagline:
    "SHAFT" is Rated "R"-Under 17 Not Admitted Without Parent...If you want to see SHAFT,asked yo mama!

    FYI: The movie was originally released on July 3,1971,the week of the Independence Day holiday. "SHAFT" did remarkable business opening weekend taking in $30 million at the boxoffice. And it launched two sequels.."SHAFT'S BIG SCORE",and "SHAFT IN AFRICA",a 2000 remake starring Samuel L. Jackson.

    "SHAFT" opened the doors for a lot of blaxploitation movies that were all over the place during the 1970's and into the early-1980's.

  • http://www.moviesunlimited.com George D. Allen

    raysson, I love your tribute to "Shaft," though I would cast my vote for "the ultimate blaxploitation movie" for "Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song!"

    But then again, THAT movie was "Rated X By An All-White Jury," so I guess we should disqualify it from contention in this "R-rated" thread :)

  • raysson

    THX-1138

    The theatrical debut of director George Lucas that was released in 1971. Not to mention it was George Lucas' first-ever "R" rated movie due to some intense violent scenes and full frontal nudity.

    Long before "American Graffiti",and way before anyone even ever heard of "Star Wars".

  • Harry Lyme

    While it surely wasn't the first R I saw, I remember to this day my wife and I venturing into Shampoo in our first summer of marriage. Teenage Carrie Fisher making her lovely suggestion to George Roundy (Warren Beatty). She knows he has been screwing her mother, and in fact, the film opens with a scene almost stolen from the overturn and curtain rise of Strauss' die Rosenkavalier, i.e., until the phone rings and Lee Grant and Beatty are interrupted. Then there is Jack Warden stumbling across Beatty at the party, deep into his work. The film is almost pure 70's.....no happy ending, money wins over all, and Beatty in his perfect role.

  • http://www.moviesunlimited.com George D. Allen

    "Beatty in his perfect role." Now that sounds like a ripe subject for meaty debate! (There are so many to choose from) Beatty's "Bulworth," an R-rated delight that seems to gain relevance by the day, is one of the most creatively profane movies ever.

  • Raymond

    I do recall seeing this 1975 comedy romp SHAMPOO during many one of its re-releases. Warren Beatty plays a male hairstylist(who was NOT gay)that catered to some of Hollywood's elite. It also starred Jack Warden, Julie Christie, Lee Grant,and Goldie Hawn. Teenage Carrie Fisher(who was 17 years old making her motion picture debut in 1975)makes a lovely and sexual suggestion toward Beatty's character(which does comes sharply close to her questioning him about his affair with women,not to mention some dirty and frank comments about him being a homosexual,which he is not!). Carrie Fisher really has a potty mouth here,and be forewarned if you see this,and this was two years before her breakthrough role that made her famous...STAR WARS.
    SHAMPOO was in fact pure adultery romp,and it was pure fun coming from the age of the 1970's. I do recall this being Rated "R"-Under 17 Requires Accompanying Parent or Adult Guardian for scenes of strong graphic language(coming from the mouths of Goldie Hawn, Julie Christie and of course Carrie Fisher!),strong sexual content and full frontal nudity(Julie Christie showing tits,ass and all of the above!),and really pushed the envelope for 1975. This was Warren Beatty at his finest!

  • Raymond

    From the previous comment:
    "Now this sounds like a ripe subject for a meaty debate!"

    "Bulworth" really pushed the limits for what Warren Beatty can do for a movie. When this movie came out in 1992,it didn't do well at the boxoffice. But for a "R" rated movie,where else will you hear Warren Beatty using explicit dirty words,not to mention making out in full frontal nudity with none other than Halle Berry. "Bulworth" was also produced and directed by Beatty.

    But his 1967 crime thriller BONNIE AND CLYDE? Who remembers seeing this movie when it first came out? From one of the old "ads" mentioned this movie upon it's release in 1967 receiving a strong "M" rating-Mature Audiences-Parental Discretion is Strongly Advised OR "M"-Mature Audiences-Parental Guidance is Suggested. This was a movie that really pissed off the censors and set a standard for some of the most graphical violent content ever shown in the history of the cinema. Think about it. The number of people who were killed off within the first half of the movie? The scene were Warren Beatty uses one cuss word throughout. Not to mention the stunning conclusion where Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway are gunned down violently in a hail of bullets by law enforcement. There hasn't been a movie like this since,and BONNIE AND CLYDE set the tone for what was to come during the changing of the production code in 1967.

  • Raymond

    SPLENDOR IN THE GRASS

    The 1961 movie that was the feature debut of Warren Beatty. Directed by Elia Kazan.

    Talk about tame by today's standards.

    When this movie came out in 1961,it really pushed the envelope for it's harrowing scenes of it's time explicit sexual content and adult situations,especially its graphic scene with Natalie Wood being forced to strip down in front of her mother and the local doctor(which was in fact,Natalie being shown from the head up and basically only showing her feet during that scene)

  • Raymond

    THE BUSHIDO BLADE

    This movie came out in 1980,during the era of the martial arts/kung-fu craze and not to mention a year before the colossal event "Shogun" exploded on television.

    Richard Boone in his final theatrical feature.

    Where else will you see Toshiro Mufune,the great Sonny Chiba,and Laura Gemser(yes,that Laura Gemser of the Emanuelle movies who is of Indonesian descent,playing a geisha girl in mid-century Japan). This was a movie that was explicitly violent in content with several scenes of bodies split in two and heads rolling off into the ground and more. This was in fact a very hard and graphic "R"-rated movie with some violent content not suitable for the squeamish during its theatrical release. And this was produced by none other than Rankin-Bass? Yes,that Rankin-Bass who were known for their sweet and delightful holiday specials and anything that was made for children,made a strong 360 degree turn here towards "adult" fare in theatres during the 1970's and 1980's. A Must See!

    Another Rankin-Bass feature was "The Last Dinosaur" from 1978 where there is a scene featuring a fully nude Connie Selleca riding a giant turtle underwater that was given a "PG" rating upon its release.

  • Raymond

    EMANUELLE IN AMERICA

    Laura Gemser from 1976 that was in fact Rated "X".

    The steamy underwater lesbian sequence that is erotic as is.

  • http://www.moviesunlimited.com George D. Allen

    Raymond! Welcome back to the celebration of R-rated fare & thanks for your latest additions to this canon :)

    I believe, however, that your recollections of "Bulworth" may be mixing themselves up with memories of "Monster's Ball," since star Beatty was indeed memorably foul-mouthed in the picture, but there was definitely no full-frontal nudity involving a lustful meetup between him and co-star Berry--which WAS a highlight of Marc Forster's pic "Monster's Ball."

    (Most people might think confusing Beatty with Billy Bob Thornton would be a tough thing to do, but when your eyes are on Halle Berry the whole time--and of course they would be!--it becomes much easier to understand how you might forget which hairy older fellow is taking part in the rumpy pumpy)

    Having not seen "The Last Dinosaur," I obviously can't confirm or deny the truth about Sellecca's nude turtle ride. But your descriptions never fail to pique a movie fan's curiosity. :)

  • Raymond

    George D. Allen,
    I did get my signals mixed up with this and let me make some corrections. "Bulworth" did have Halle Berry in this one,but she was just there as some hood rat from the streets trying to make Warren Beatty's character blend in with the black community. I did see "Bulworth" in the theaters first-run and when it was released didn't do well at the box office in 1992. But the movie where Halle Berry made history in 2002 as the first black actress to win the Oscar for "Monster's Ball",was as weird as it gets.

    And she screwed Billy Bob Thornton for an Oscar? It was a tough thing to do especially with the "rumpy pumpy" scene in "Monster's Ball" which some audiences who went to see it couldn't get the idea of the whole picture,especially those who had to stomach it when it was released in theaters in 2002,even though it was a "R" rated movie.

  • Raymond

    SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER when came out in theaters around Christmas of 1977 with John Travolta was indeed Rated "R"-
    Under 17 Requires Accompanying Parent or Adult Guardian. The reason,the infamous suicide scene where John Travolta's best friend rescues him from his jump from the Brooklyn Bridge. But I looked at it from the dramatic perspective and NOT from it's famous disco sequences. Don't get me wrong,it was great picture but it was the soundtrack that put this movie on the map in 1977,and during many of its re-releases.

  • Raymond

    THE LEGEND OF MISTER CHARLEY....Fred Williamson from 1972
    The original title had the "N" word in the marquee. Even though it pushed the envelope for a "R" rated movie not to mention the sadistic scenes of violent content throughout its 98 minute running time.

  • Raymond

    THE LEARNING TREE

    Released in 1969,and it was the first movie produced and directed by an African-American for a major studio. Gordon Parks became the first black director to helm a major motion picture for a Hollywood studio....Warner Brothers in 1969.

    Upon its release it was well received upon critical acclaim by both critics and audiences alike. But the film itself,which I had seen a dozen times,twice in the theaters during one of its many re-releases is something to see when it came to its sensitive material. In 1969,it was given a "G" rating upon it's original theatrical release. Reason? Several scenes which include young men jumping into a creek,full frontal nudity,not to mention some very rough language and some very shocking if not explicitly violent material,not to mention the usual "N" word and the "boy" word popping up on sue. Lots of racial material that maybe too intense for young children under 13.

    It maybe tame for today's standards,but back then it was controversial even for a movie that was given a "G" rating in 1969,would be "PG-13" today.

    The reason why this movie became a success was because the star of the film Kyle Johnson became a HUGE teen idol for young blacks during that era. Kyle Johnson,who played the character of Newt,is really the son of actress Nichelle Nichols,aka Uhara from the TV-show Star Trek

    • Raymond

      Speaking of THE LEARNING TREE..............

      In 1969,this film was given a "M" rating by the Motion Picture Association of America. This was not a movie for those under 13 years of age. THE LEARNING TREE contains some very intense scenes including scenes of full frontal nudity,strong and intense graphic violence,strong adult language,a disturbing rape scene and explicit racial words throughout. Yes,the "N" word is used numerous times in this movie.

  • Raymond

    PLANTATION PASSION from 1976......

    Talk about the era of really bad and pathetic Italian cinema.

    Rated R

  • http://www.facebook.com/cheryl.herin Cheryl Herin

    The first R-rated film I saw was "The Godfather". I was not quite 14. We saw it at a now-defunct drive-in theater in Buena Park, CA. My older sister had already seen it, and told me about the horse-head-in-bed scene. But I misunderstood her, and expected to see the horse actually getting beheaded, so seeing the scene was not that shocking to me, because I was expecting more. I think my parents might have groaned a little bit during Michael's wedding night scene in Sicily when his bride bared her breasts. They said they liked the movie, though.

    • Raymond

      I didn't see THE GODFATHER until I was in college during the 1980's. I too remember the horse-head in the bed scene,not to mention the strong violent content that ran throughout the film's entire 175 minute running time. But in 1972,I was too young to see it,but in turn my parents took me to see Diana Ross in LADY SINGS THE BLUES that was far more shocking,even though this was a very hard "R" rated film. Yes,my uncle took me to see MANDINGO in 1975 when I was about 11-years old,and it was far more violent than I ever imagined for a movie that really pushed the envelope for a "R" rated movie.

  • Raymond

    Cheryl Herin,

    The first drive-in movie I saw with my parents was Tom Laughlin in BILLY JACK released in 1971. I don't remember much about it,but I recall a vivid and graphic rape scene involving a minor that gave this film a stern "GP" rating(All Ages Admitted:Parental Guidance Suggested).

    Just to let you know that Francis Ford Coppula's THE GODFATHER is celebrating its 40th Anniversary. March 16,1972 was the year this film was released in theatres. And what I'm doing at the present,along with some movie buffs from Cinema Treasures are compiling the dates and cities to where the film played first-run. And it will be posted in March on the Cinema Treasures website and the Cinema Tour website. Any information feel free to e-mail me at raysson@yahoo.com Thank you.

  • Raymond

    Sidney Poitier and Rod Steiger in IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT that was released in 1967.

    Rated M-For Mature Audiences. Parental Discretion is Strongly Advised.

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