Los Angeles Times

R is for ‘Bully,’ ratings chief says

Makers are denied a PG-13 for documentar­y aimed at teens.

- Steven Zeitchik reporting from washington

A battle over movie ratings escalated Thursday as filmmakers and lawmakers called on the Motion Picture Assn. of America to replace the R rating given to the teen-bullying documentar­y “Bully” with a less severe PG-13.

Hoping to defuse the controvers­y, MPAA chief Christophe­r J. Dodd held a screening and panel discussion at the group’s headquarte­rs featuring the movie’s director, distributo­r and subjects. But the event turned into a forum for further criticism, with panelists and audience members charging that the MPAA was failing in its mission to guide parents and protect children.

People “believe in the system, but the system is letting them down,” director Lee Hirsch said, addressing Dodd. “We need leadership and your faith ... to overturn” this ruling.

“Bully,” which will be released by the Weinstein Co. on March 30, centers on five families whose children have been bullied. The fly-on-thewall documentar­y does not contain an abundance of explicit content; in one scene, however, a teen hurls harsh profanitie­s at another child. That prompted the R rating, which means that moviegoers under age 17 must be accompanie­d by an adult.

An appeal by the Weinstein Co. was denied.

As others at the panel discussion echoed Hirsch’s complaints, Dodd sought repeatedly to steer the conversati­on back to the issues raised by the film. “I don’t want [the ratings issue] to step all over what Lee crafted,” he said. But Hirsch volleyed back: “The R is stepping all over it; that’s the problem.”

Grass-roots activists and the Weinstein publicity machine have gone into overdrive over the rating, and a Michigan teen who was a victim of bullying started an online petition to change the rating. Weinstein Co. chief Harvey Weinstein alerted celebritie­s such as Meryl Streep. The actress signed, as have Drew Brees, Ellen Degeneres and Justin Bieber. The number of signees now exceeds 300,000.

The rating has touched off a debate about the practices of an industry trade group that self-polices its content, and prompted calls for more transparen­cy and flexibilit­y. “Why can’t it get a PG-13 with an ‘E’ for ‘Exception’ next to it?” Weinstein said in an interview before the panel.

Rep. Linda T. Sanchez (D-lakewood) is among more than two dozen lawmakers drafting a letter to Dodd asking for the decision to be overturned.

“This is a movie that’s all about protecting kids, and the fact that they would offer a rating that won’t let kids see it seems really counterint­uitive,” she said.

But the MPAA has held firm, saying that without a new edit of the film, there is no precedent or provision for reconsider­ing.

In an interview, Dodd said that even if there were such a provision, he couldn’t ignore a perceptual issue.

“I’m stuck,” he said. “If we change the ruling in this case, I’ll have 10 other filmmakers lined up saying they shouldn’t be given the R. And who are we to say why this film should be different than the others?”

steve.zeitchik@latimes.com

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