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Eli Roth Surrenders to Your Kids



The director of the very violent Hostel movies to make a film the whole family can enjoy.

It happens eventually to every filmmaker and actor associated with R-rated movies*, and now Eli Roth, the “torture porn auteur” who gave us Hostel and Hostel II, is making the transition to family-friendly fare — in order to make the kids happy, of course.

No, it has nothing to do with the money, which comes more easily with younger-targeted, lower-rated releases (especially when your last movie disappoints). It has to do with the realization that kids don’t have enough movies made for them, and they’d apparently like to see what Eli Roth’s talent is like. Only, up until now, they haven’t been allowed. As Roth defends the move:

“Everyone I know has been saying ‘When are you gonna do a movie my kids can see?’ And finally, I’m gonna make a movie that 13-year-old kids can see.”

The movie, which Roth is still scripting, is described as being inspired by Cloverfield and Transformers, with all the “mass-destruction” and “chaos and pandemonium” that would entail. But it won’t be too scary, as it’s being planned strictly to receive a PG-13 rating. Roth says he feels “like he pushed the violence in R rated movies about as far as [he] can push it,” and that he’s “bled out.”

However, he isn’t completely done with the gore and promises that the unrated DVD version of this planned PG-13 movie will feature some gratuitously violent scenes shot specifically to be left on the cutting room floor. Hey, as long as the hypocritical studios allow it, that’s a brilliant idea.

* Here’s a sampling of others who did it for the kids:

  • Mark Wahlberg on making Invincible: “It’s a movie my kids can see - my nieces and nephews. I haven’t had that. None of my nieces and nephews have seen Boogie Nights, thank God! I haven’t made too many PG movies.” (via IMDb/WENN)
  • Jodie Foster on making Nim’s Island: “I was dying to do something lighter and I was excited about a movie my kids could see.” (via Just Jared)
  • Gary Sinise on making Mission to Mars: “I can take my kids to it and that’s a nice thing to be able to do. They’ve been asking me when I’m going to do something that they can see.” (via The Cranky Critic)
  • The Rock on making The Game Plan (by way of reporter Marshall Fine): “Meanwhile, he’s just happy he’s finally made a movie that his 6-year-old daughter can see (”She sat all the way through it,” he notes). Like Joe in “The Game Plan,” Johnson found that parenthood required adjustments to his life that he never imagined himself making.” (via NY Daily News)
  • Gary Oldman on making Lost in Space: “I wanted to do a movie my son could see.” (via Entertainment Weekly)
  • Vin Diesel on making The Pacifier: “I needed to do a film that my niece and nephew could see. I needed to do a film that my godchildren could see. I needed to do a film that would dispel the fact that the only movie I’ve ever done was “Iron Giant” for these toddlers.” (via MTV)
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2 Comments

  1. Posted May 26, 2008 at 12:34 pm | Permalink

    I’m a mom looking to find out how inappropriate Adam Sandler’s Zohan movie would be for children. I see it’s rated PG13… how lude and crude is it? any info is greatly appreciated. thank you!!

  2. Posted May 26, 2008 at 5:01 pm | Permalink

    mara, I would check this site (its Canadian): http://www.parentpreviews.com/movie-reviews/you-dont-mess-with-the-zohan.shtml

    Violence:

    -Violence portrayals of hand-to-hand conflict, gunplay and a stabbing.

    - Depiction of a severed hand.

    Sexual Content:

    - Nude buttocks in a non-sexual context are shown on two occasions.

    - Four sexually suggestive scenes are depicted off-screen.

    - One sexually suggestive scene (not involving nudity) is depicted on screen.

    - Frequent sexual references, innuendo and crude content are included.

    - Frequent crude portrayals of bodily functions, some in a sexual context.

    - Embracing and kissing

    Language:

    - Use of coarse language, scatological slang and profanities.

    - Racial slurs and derogatory references to sexual orientation.

    - One use of a variation of the sexual expletive in a non-sexual context.

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