Movie studios have made it impossible to market a movie given an NC-17 rating, therefore killing any chance it may have had to be a success, effectively censoring filmmakers.
And b/c of this, most retailers (Best Buy, WalMart, Blockbuster, Hollywood Video, etc etc) won't even carry a NC-17 movie. Sometimes, there'll also be an "R-rated" version of the movie released for a film that was originally NC-17 (The Dreamers) or went Unrated b/c they would not accept a MPAA rating (Requiem For A Dream), just to make the retailer happy.
And yeah, you'd have a
better chance of finding an "Unrated" movie at a retailer than a NC-17 rated flick.
The biggest problem, I think, w/ the "NC-17" and "R" rating is this -- They BOTH have the same age requirement. Only difference is that at NC-17,
no parent can accompany one under 17 into the theater, unlike the R rating.
Who the hell designed this system? NC-17 is a good idea, but maybe the age requirement should be higher? Maybe NC-21?? I mean, the content in "R" and "NC-17" is different. Normally, NC-17 is much more graphic in its actual content -- usually, most NC-17's get that rating b/c of "graphic sex" -- like say Young Adam, The Dreamers, or Showgirls.
Can anybody think of a movie that got NC-17 for violence?
That's the other problem. Sex and violence are treated often very different by the MPAA. How an extremely violent movie like Saw didn't get an NC-17 for graphic violence alone is WAY beyond me (it wound up w/ an R-rating, somehow...), yet Young Adam got a NC-17 for graphic sexual content.