Rechercher dans ce blog

Wednesday, December 30, 2020

10 Most Critically Acclaimed NC-17 Rated Films (Ranked By Rotten Tomatoes) - Screen Rant

rotten.indah.link

Sometimes a filmmaker creates a piece of work that pushes the boundaries beyond the qualifications for the "R-rating." Whether it is extreme violence, graphic sex, or some other envelope-pushing facet, certain films necessitate a higher rating, thus the NC-17 rating was born.

RELATED: 10 Violent Movies From Back In The Day That Should Have Been Banned

Though the rating has been applied to some of the best films of our time, many films that receive an NC-17 rating are edited and resubmitted for a lesser rating (American PsychoEyes Wide Shut). These are the 10 most critically acclaimed films that were originally released with an NC-17 rating, as rated by Rotten Tomatoes.

advertising

10 Henry & June (1990) - 62%

Co-writer and director Philip Kaufman adapted the popular biographical novel for the screen with this Academy Award-nominated take on the love life of novelist Henry Miller. Kaufman's film was given an NC-17 rating for its steamy sex scenes between Miller and his mistress, and author of the source material, Anaïs Nin.

While the film was fairly well-received at the time, it was ironically derided by some critics for not being erotic enough. Though a good film in its own right, the film is primarily known for being the first film to receive the newly instilled NC-17 rating.

9 Crash (1996) - 63%

Due to director David Cronenberg's infamous penchant for blending mind-bending concepts with visceral violence, it was only a matter of time before one of his films was given an NC-17 rating. It came in 1996 with the release of Crash, a bizarre film centered around a group of 'friends' whose common link is their sexual arousal at the sight of car crashes and their victims.

The film's highly graphic sex scenes and signature Cronenbergian violence was enough to warrant the rating, though the film's quality would win it general acclaim and a series of awards on the major festival circuit.

advertising

8 Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! (1989) - 67%

Pedro Almodovar has had more than one of his films get slapped with the NC-17 rating from the MPAA, though this remains one of his most vibrant and unusually unsettling visions.

RELATED: 10 Best Pedro Almodóvar Movies

Essentially a story about Stockholm syndrome played as a romantic drama, the film is deceivingly simple on first watch and garnered a seemingly equal amount of scorn and praise when released stateside. Antonio Banderas manages to strike a great balance between charismatic and malicious and helps sell the ethically murky waters of the narrative.

advertising

7 Man Bites Dog (1992) - 74%

Man Bites Dog-croppe

Surely one of the most controversial films of the 90s, this documentary-styled polemic on the cruelty of human nature is one of the more notorious underground films to receive the rating, especially when originally released in 1992.

The film's setup is relatively simple -- a film crew decides to trail a ruthless murderer around as he commits his crimes amidst nonchalant musings on everything from art to the nature of living. A brutal and important film in the cult film circuit, Man Bites Dog earns both its rating and status. Unfortunately for underground cinephiles, the filmmakers never made another movie.

advertising

6 Bad Lieutenant (1992) - 77%

A dark plunge into police corruption and the depths of some people's depravity, Bad Lieutenant, also released in 1992, represented notable auteur Abel Ferrera's attempt to explore themes of redemption and man's relation to his vices.

Indie legend Harvey Keitel stars in the lead and titular role as a vice-laden cop investigating a horrendous assault on a nun whilst attempting to weather his existential crisis. An exceedingly bleak and challenging film, the technical aspects give the film a gritty look and feel that adds to its unsettling power. One of the boldest movies of the decade, Bad Lieutenant is a low-budget masterpiece that has become a favorite for many of cinema's biggest names.

5 Shame (2011) - 79%

Filmmaker Steve McQueen has become one of the best filmmakers of this current generation, with his technical prowess matching his writing and directing abilities. One of his darkest and hardest to digest films is 2011's collaboration with Michael Fassbender, Shame. Fassbender stars as a man who is intensely addicted to sex, but can't form personal relationships, which comes to haunt him when his sister shows up unannounced.

RELATED: 10 Recent Sexploitation Movies You Have To Watch

The film features explicit sex scenes that are integral to the film's thematic goal. It's a dark and cold look at loneliness that goes where many romantic dramas would never dare.

advertising

4 Pink Flamingos (1972) - 81%

Though initially released with an X rating, Pink Flamingos has subsequently been re-rated NC-17. John Waters, the king of filth and transgressive kitsch, released his most iconic and depraved piece of work ever in 1972 with the release of the film. Absolutely disgusting and somehow enthralling to behold, Waters and his muse, Divine, craft one of the most subversive cult films ever made.

The film's loose narrative concerns Divine's character striving to maintain the title of "Filthiest Person Alive," which she does by engaging in a torrent of exhibitions meant to disgust. Unique and important in the history of film, Pink Flamingos made the best of the NC-17 rating.

3 Last Tango In Paris (1972) - 83%

Controversial even now, as much or more for its off-camera infamy than the actual film itself, Last Tango in Paris is a searing look at grief and eroticism as interpreted through the eyes of Bernardo Bertolucci and is about a recently widowed American who finds solace in an affair with a much younger French girl.

The film owes much of its strange allure to the rapturous cinematography and the disturbing and nuanced lead performance from Marlon Brando. A staunchly anti-Hollywood romance, the film's sex scenes are about as raw and explicit as one can imagine. It's a troubled classic.

advertising

2 The Cook, The Thief, His Wife & Her Lover (1989) - 85%

Avant-garde master Peter Greenaway unleashed a slightly more accessible (a very loose term) version of his style with this sumptuous buffet of a film. One of the most unique films ever made, The Cook, The Thief, His Wife & Her Lover mixes Shakesperian tragedy with a postmodern horror twist that works in so many ways.

RELATED: Helen Mirren: Her 5 Best (& 5 Worst) Films According To IMDb

A film that is most definitely not for everyone, the film's sex scenes are pretty heavy, but it is the film's unforgettable finale that solidifies its rating and the film to a flawless and jaw-dropping close.

1 Blue Is The Warmest Color (2013) - 89%

Again, a film that is somewhat dampened in the public memory for some less than ethical events that allegedly happened during filming, Blue is the Warmest Color is nevertheless one of the most powerful films yet made about an LGBTQ relationship.

Lea Seydoux and Adele Exarchopolous give two performances that leap from the screen and contain an understated nuance that is hard to replicate. The film's three-hour runtime allows for everything to be paced slowly, letting the characters breathe. It's one of the most intimate and well-performed films in modern foreign cinema and deserves its mass acclaim.

NEXT: The Most Controversial Movies Of The Decade

advertising
Next DC: 10 Best Live-Action Villain Introductions On Film, Ranked
About The Author The Link Lonk


December 31, 2020 at 02:30AM
https://screenrant.com/critically-acclaimed-nc-17-rated-films-rotten-tomatoes/

10 Most Critically Acclaimed NC-17 Rated Films (Ranked By Rotten Tomatoes) - Screen Rant

https://news.google.com/search?q=rotten&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en

No comments:

Post a Comment

Featured Post

F9 Falls To Rotten Rating On Rotten Tomatoes - Screen Rant

rotten.indah.link [unable to retrieve full-text content] F9 Falls To Rotten Rating On Rotten Tomatoes    Screen Rant The Link Lonk June...

Popular Posts