I felt the same way about The Birdcage. They drop F bombs and Robin Williams, Nathan Lane (what a stretch), and Hank Azaria played gay characters in the 1990's. Maybe a statue wang is shown for comedic effect in one scene. There's a reference to a politician dying while doing a prostitute, but
nothing is shown as far as sex scenes go. Make your own joke about Robin Williams and Nathan Lane being unattractive here. It's clearly R because it comes off as an adult's movie without being
that kind of an adult movie. By any means, PG-13 would have worked, but not a lot of teenagers would want to go see that, unless they related to gay themes in movies.
Yeah, the ratings system has gotten pretty dumb. You never truly know what your gonna get when you see a movie. I don't understand how you can have a film that's PG that most parents wouldn't show their young kids, yet at the same time a movie like "Frozen" is somehow the exact same rating.
I can tell you, that's really screwed me up before. When you see an animated film that's PG and it's clearly marketed as a family film, the first thing you expect is something like Pixar/Disney/Dreamworks etc. Because of that, "Coraline" completely scarred me. It was so dark and disturbing, yet the advertisements didn't make it seem that way.
G meant something back in the day. Even Hunchback of Notre Dame was G rated. Yeah, sure, Disney
did tone things down to make it palatable, but...ehhh...they didn't tone things down really
that much. No dead Esmeralda with Quasi clinging forever to her corpse, but still managed to be Disney's most disturbing movie. And it's stiff competition. I can't think of a kid's movie where someone sings about how they're perversely aroused by a woman and blaming it on sinfulness, calling on her to either be forcibly married to him or burn in the eternal inferno.
And it got a *&^%in' G rating.
Sure, Angry Birds got a Pedo joke in, and the assumption that the Pigs are baby eaters (which raises so many questions about if the birds only lay fertilized eggs). Even then, that's nothing compared to just The Lion King. Then again, I totally agree that Laika's movies have themes that are creepy, disturbing, downright depressing, or older kid enough to earn those PG ratings. Kubo was a tear a minute, beautiful film with some very distressing imagery that would scare the
crap out of anyone under 8. The film basically opens up with the mother getting
severe brain damage.
Thing is, the TV ratings get it right with Y and Y-7 (usually followed with "FV", fantasy violence). Even the darn Games rating board had to come up with E-10 for games that are slightly more violent than E games, but not quite 14+. Seems G and PG are supposed to be the Young Audiences welcome and some scenes may disturb kids, but comes off more as G is for babies and PG is the hip film for all them
coooooool kids.