Michael Moore Wants You Kids To Sneak Into His Latest R-Rated Movie
It's fair to say most of us snuck into R-rated movies before we reached the magical age of 17. It's easy to do, and you'd almost have to go out of your way to get caught, unless you went to a really strict movie theater. While plenty of kids and teens snuck in to see Deadpool this weekend, there's another movie in theaters right now that a certain director thinks they should attend next.
Below, Michael Moore (Sicko) explains how anyone under the age of 17 can see his new documentary Where to Invade Next.
Moore's latest doc was branded with an R-rating from the MPAA for "language, some violent images, drug use and brief graphic nudity." The director rightfully called out the ratings board for the unjustified classification. Moore lost his appeal to overturn the rating, but that's not stopping him from rallying up the kids to attend his newest film.
At Michael Moore's official website, the director wrote an open letter to anyone under the age of 17 that wants to see his film. Here's what he had to say:
High School Students of America:
Imagine a place where you don't have to do any homework, and you don't have to take those ridiculous standardized tests. Or how 'bout a place where your public school lunch is a luxurious four-course meal that you have the time to enjoy each day. Imagine a country where all college is free — and it's impossible to find anyone who has a student loan to pay off. Can you believe there's actually a place where teenagers can easily get birth control with no parental permission, and that when it comes to getting free health services there's no issue because, even as a teen, the society respects that only you should have control over your own body. Imagine a world where no hall passes are required to go to the bathroom, where school is not an assembly line (and it doesn't start at 8 in the friggin' morning!). And what if, on top of all of this, you could vote at the age of 16 and have a real say in your future.
Well, that place exists. It exists in many countries, all over the world. In fact, in every advanced industrialized country, one or more of the above is already happening every single day. But not here in the U.S.A.
And so I've made a movie about all those places, a movie that will take you on a raucous, hilarious ride through the great life that they're having and we're not. It's called WHERE TO INVADE NEXT, and it opens this weekend, February 12th, in theaters across the country.
There's only one problem: It's rated "R".
Now, you might be asking yourself, "Why did the American ratings board (the MPAA) give my film an 'R' rating?" Maybe it has something to do with all the things I've just listed above. Some people would prefer you not know how teenagers in the rest of the world are treated. Bottom line: They're not treated like babies and inmates. They are treated like full-grown human beings with dignity and rights. Lots of rights.
But here in the USA, the MPAA has deemed my film too dangerous for you to see on your own. So I'd like to fix that. I'd like you to see my movie. And I'd like to help you sneak in to do that this weekend.
Now, I'm probably going to have a shitstorm rain down upon me for doing this. I don't care. Wrong is wrong, and it is wrong to not let you see this movie. The theaters or the movie studios or the censors may not like what I'm about to suggest, but they're just going to have to deal with it. It is insulting to you as a 15 or 16-yr to be told you can't handle the truth. What year is this — 1952?
By now, you probably know all the ways to sneak into an "R"-rated movie — buy a ticket to another film then sneak in; go in to the PG film you bought a ticket for then go out to get popcorn and "forget" your ticket so you can then head in to the "R"-rated film; etc.
Here are a few of the other ways (some of which I'm sure you've tried):
1. Buy your ticket online. That gets you past the first gatekeeper at the ticket window who wants to see your ID.
2. Speaking of ID – here's a good site on how to make fake ID: (CLICK HERE FOR LINK) (use responsibly, not for alcohol or joining the army)
3. Have a 17 or 18-yr. old friend buy the tickets for you, or randomly ask an adult in line to do it. Tell them why you want to see this movie. It's not like standing outside the 7-11 trying to get a stranger to buy beer.
4. While standing at the box office window or in front of the ticket taker, try to mimic the way older adults look and sound so as to draw less attention to yourself. Suggestions: be hunched over, look tired, stressed out; have a glaze over your eyes, or a distant stare into a bleak future of abandoned hope. Talk about your 401K or the baby keeping you up at night or something you read in the Wall Street Journal. That should do the trick.
5. If you buy a ticket to another film that's PG-13 in order to sneak in to mine, may I suggest helping out the box office of "Creed", "Brooklyn" or "Hail Caesar". They're good movies, and you should come back and see them anyway.
You gotta love tip no. 5. Not only is Moore promoting his own film but also the works of others. Those aren't three bad films to support, either. You can read the rest of the letter at Moore's website, and once again, he raises old but resonant complaints about the MPAA. The ratings board doesn't deem it appropriate for teenagers to see how kids in other countries are treated, but that's not very surprising, because in the case of Boyhood, the MPAA didn't even want them to see how they grew up in this country.
Where to Invade Next is now in theaters.