Award-nominated film 127 HOURS given rare rating on appeal
Academy Award-nominated film 127 HOURS given rare rating on appeal.
127 HOURS, nominated for six Academy Awards, has been rated RP16 - “graphic content may disturb” by the Film Board of Review in response to an appeal by distributor 20th Century Fox.
RP16 – meaning that people under 16 can attend if accompanied by a parent or guardian - is rarely used in New Zealand. The original rating by the film censors, the Office of Film and Literature Classification, was the more restrictive R16.
20th Century Fox appealed on the grounds that 127 HOURS is a quality film, telling an inspirational true story, which also contains a powerful public service message about risk and consequences. The film tells the survival story of Aron Ralston, a climber who amputated his own arm after it was trapped under a boulder for 5 days when he was canyoneering in Utah.
The decision of the Film Board of Review says the scene in which Aron amputates his own arm has “plainly not been included simply to shock viewers without context or connection to the storyline or theme of the film.”
The Board also noted that “the duration of the objectionable scene is only 3 minutes which ought to be considered in the context of a total running time of 93 minutes.” And: “The choice as to which young persons ought to see the film should be made by a parent or guardian.”
Fox’s submission to the Film Board of Review reads in part:
The film carries with it a strong
public service message which the original rating decision
does not take into account. The film’s main character
embarks on a journey without telling anyone where he is
going and without all of the necessary equipment necessary
to support his safety.. When he becomes hopelessly trapped,
those decisions virtually zero his chances of rescue and
therefore survival. The significant lengths he ultimately
goes to, to free himself and his loss are strong
consequential messages that should be seen by a wider
audience.
The film, directed by Danny Boyle and starring
James Franco, opens in New Zealand cinemas this Thursday,
February 10. It has earned six Academy Award Nominations
including Best Picture, Best Actor and Best Adapted
Screenplay.
ENDS