More studios take chances on R-rated comedies
In comedy, Hollywood has learned that raunch sells.
Studios prefer their funny flicks in the benign PG-13 mold, a rating that keeps the audience broad to fill as many seats as possible.
More and more, however, they are taking chances on R-rated comedies that ratchet up the rawness, allowing the “Sex and the City” gal pals to strut their stuff, Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly to expose body parts in “Step Brothers,” or Tom Cruise to swear like a sailor.
“He was willing to go for it,” Ben Stiller, star and director of next week’s “Tropic Thunder,” said of Cruise, who is almost unrecognizable as a bald studio executive with a colossal talent for cussing.
“I think the audience will really enjoy him letting loose like that.”
Racier hits such as “Wedding Crashers,” “The 40-Year-Old Virgin” and “Knocked Up” have proved there’s a place for R-rated humor.
With $56.8 million over opening weekend in May, “Sex and the City” had the best debut ever for an R-rated comedy. It has racked up a total of $151 million, ranking among the 50 highest-grossing comedies ever.
Close on that film’s high heels comes a rare late-summer surge of saltier fare, led by Ferrell and Reilly’s “Step Brothers,” which delivered a solid $30.9 million opening weekend – big bucks for an R-rated romp.
“Pineapple Express” (opening today), with Seth Rogen and James Franco as stoners on the run, and “Tropic Thunder” (opening Wednesday), about pampered actors caught in real combat with drug-runners while shooting a Vietnam War picture, have enjoyed great buzz from advance screenings.
Both are loaded with violence, coarse language and outrageous gags that the filmmakers could never have touched in a PG-13 movie.
Looking ahead to this fall, Kate Hudson, Dane Cook and Jason Biggs’ romantic comedy “My Best Friend’s Girl” (Sept. 19) comes with an R rating. Filmmaker Kevin Smith pushes the boundary even further, talking his way down to an R rating from the original NC-17 for “Zack and Miri Make a Porno” (Oct. 31), starring Rogen and Elizabeth Banks.
Of the 100 top-grossing comedies ranked by box-office tracker Media By Numbers, 47 were rated PG-13, 32 were PG and eight had G ratings. Only 13 were rated R, with 1984’s “Beverly Hills Cop” still the leader with $234.8 million.
Stiller’s breakout role came with 1998’s R-rated “There’s Something About Mary,” but his biggest hits are milder – the blockbusters “Meet the Fockers” (rated PG-13) and “Night at the Museum” (rated PG).
Hollywood has scored occasional comedy hits with R-rated flicks such as “National Lampoon’s Animal House” and “Porky’s.” But studios became more emboldened to venture into R territory in the last decade with the “American Pie” comedies and the early “Scary Movie” spoofs.
The wave of R-rated hits over the last few summers includes “Borat: Cultural Learnings of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan” and “Superbad.”
“If you look at most of these R-rated movies that found an audience, it’s because they were really good,” says producer Peter Safran, whose credits include “Scary Movie” and the upcoming PG-13 comedy “Disaster Movie.”
“The R rating allows the filmmakers to truly realize their vision,” Safran says. “There’s just a freedom that comes with it. There’s no way ‘Wedding Crashers’ could have been ‘Wedding Crashers’ if you inhibit what it was that Owen Wilson and Vince Vaughn were able to do in that movie.”
PG-13 comedies are not likely to lose their dominance. It’s simple number-crunching for Hollywood: An R rating means anyone younger than 17 must be accompanied by an adult, while a PG-13 movie is open to anyone, including teens who make up a huge segment of weekend audiences and might balk at having to tag along with their parents to the theater.
“Step Brothers” director Adam McKay says studio executives offered a precise math lesson on what they would be losing by doing an R-rated movie rather a PG-13 one. The studio accurately forecast an opening weekend in the $30 million range, as opposed to the $40 million it might have brought in as a PG-13 comedy.
So R-rated comedies have to be priced accordingly, with studios willing to put up $50 million to $60 million to make the movies instead of the $90 million they might shell out for one with a broader rating, McKay exlains.
It was a sacrifice he and Ferrell were willing to make after doing two PG-13 movies together, “Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby” and “Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy.”
“Just this little opening seemed to happen with the way the studios were willing to go, ‘OK, R-rated movies seem to be profitable, so we’ll maybe open that door a little bit,’ ” Ferrell says.
“It also just comes down to leverage,” he adds. “You luckily have some hit movies, and then you kind of go, ‘OK, you want us to do another one? We’d love to do it R.’ ‘Oh, really? Well, let’s see …’ ‘Otherwise, we’ll go somewhere else.’ ‘OK, OK, we’ll do it R.’ ”
Co-star Reilly says the R rating gave him, Ferrell and their collaborators the liberty to take their comedy improvisation to extremes.
“Anything’s possible, and so more than wanting to make it an R-rated movie, we just wanted the freedom to make it whatever it’s going to be,” he says.
“Also, comedy’s job is to push boundaries. We didn’t make the boundaries. We didn’t move the last boundary, but here we are. People are expecting something a little crazier than the last thing they saw.”