A question that's been floating around in my mind lately is whether or not the MPAA ratings system is or should soon be done away with. The issue came to a head when I heard that the MPAA wanted to give _Clerks_, a great independent film without a single on-screen second of sex *or* violence, an NC-17 because of its explicit *talk* about sex (has Jack Valenti watched Oprah lately?). My ire was raised further by the dirty looks I got when I took my seven-year old son to see _Ed Wood_, and got dirty looks from other patrons for taking my son to see an "R-rated" picture. Aside from a few lines that are so funny only a moron could find them offensive (Landau as Lugosi declaring "Karloff ain't fit to smell my shit!"), there's nothing that wouldn't feel at home on a PG-13 film, except cross-dressing (GASP!). Can seeing Johnny Depp in drag be more dangerous to the moral fabric of our youth than seeing the bombs, shootings, and stabbings that one can readily view under the PG-13 sign (most recently, say, in _A Clear and Present Danger_?). I hear the ditributors of _Clerks_ are planning to sue the MPAA ratings board. Not that it hasn't been threatened before, but wouldn't it be nice if it actually happened?? ======================================================================== "Convictions are more dangerous enemies of truth than lies" --Friedrich Nietzsche =======Russell A. Potter========<[log in to unmask]>=====================