Do we need to return to it later in the film, only for
even more nudity and sexual positions to be shown?
Not exact matches
Not to be a curmudgeon, but I walked out of that movie... the
nudity and sex scenes were
even more gratuitous and tedious than HBO, also compounded by the French prerequisite of
nudity and sex whether it helps the plot or not.
Oh, there's the brand of
nudity that all of sudden Hollywood deems shocking (ie: nonsexual male nakedness intended to be comedic, as if we all don't know what men's bodies look like), there's copious, irresponsible consumption of alcohol and other mind - altering substances, there's
even flirtation with the criminal elements of an urban environment possibly
more organized for the benefit of criminals than the law - abiding.
The Hangover DVD is what we expect out of every male - audience - focused broad comedy: there's some mild
nudity,
more raunchy jokes than
even most 12 - year - olds will be able to stomach, some partially offensive ethnic stereotypes, the women aren't so much as mistreated as nonexistent, and there's Mike Tyson.
There is an
even more detailed sequence involving a heterosexual couple, with a man and woman seen in bed after spending the night together (no explicit
nudity is shown).
Game of Thrones stars Natalie Dormer, Carice van Houten, and
even Kit Harington — though, just not from him — have advocated for
more male
nudity, citing the major lack in equality when it comes to disrobing on the HBO series.
It's
more vulgar, there is
even more gratuitous
nudity, and the main characters are drunk in nearly every scene.
Parents: According to the ESRB, this game is rated M and contains Blood and Gore, Sand, Drug References,
More Sand, Intense Violence,
Even More Sand,
Nudity, Sexual Content, Strong Language, Use of Alcohol, and Sand.
Well, Lenny's wife Roxanne (Salma Hayek), who
even Lenny admits in the movie's single and genuinely clever joke is too beautiful for him, is over-emotional (the movie's opinion of her) because she wants to have another kid, so it does aim one sexist stereotype at one of its few major female characters (Speaking of sexism, can we talk about the MPAA ratings board's glaring double standard in pointing out that a movie's
nudity is of the «male rear» variety, directly implying that there's something different — worse,
more offensive — about the same of the female kind?).
Still,
even if those 8 minutes add some things that don't fly in PG - 13land (like brief flashes of
nudity and extensive uses of Samuel L. Jackson's blogger - inspired «SOAP» exclamation),
more offensive elements probably existed in the theatrical cut, which presumably still comprises 91 % of the extended cut.
There's also a real question as to how much criticism
even matters: Pauline Kael had a loud and influential voice, and Women's Media Criticism departments have existed on campuses for decades, and yet movies and television today have
more nudity, profanity and gratuitious violence than ever in history.