January
12, 2004
For
Immediate Release
Palm
Pictures Appeals MPAA Rating of GUNNER PALACE
January 12, 2005 - New York, NY -- Chris Blackwell's Palm Pictures today
announced that it plans to appeal the Motion Picture Association of
America's (MPAA) "R" rating for its upcoming release about
American soldiers in Iraq, GUNNER PALACE.
The MPAA has given the film an "R" rating based solely on
"language". Co-Director Michael Tucker spent two months in
Iraq living with the Army's 2/3 Field Artillery. With total access to
all operations and activities, GUNNER PALACE reveals the inside story
of 400 American soldiers (aka: "Gunners") carrying out their
mission from a bombed-out pleasure palace originally built by Sadaam
Hussein and later home to his son Uday. In the film, soldiers are shown
experiencing and responding to the war around them.
An "R" rating from the MPAA restricts access to the film to
audiences under the age of 17 unless accompanied by a parent or guardian.
"No doubt, there is strong language in the film, but taken in context
of the subject, soldiers at war, the language is not gratuitous,"
said Michael Tucker, Co-Director of GUNNER PALACE. "We may not
like or agree with what the soldiers say in this film. Some of us may
even find their language offensive. However, their voices deserve to
be heard--without restriction--in the country that sent them to war.
This is a film about war and the reactions of the young people fighting
in it. Those reactions are expressed through the language of the day.
To restrict access to the film via an "R" rating is essentially
censoring the experience of the American soldier. As Americans, one
way we can support the troops, is by listening to what they have to
say. To do this, to honor and respect their experience and sacrifice,
we ask the MPAA to constructively work with us to bring the soldiers
story to an audience that will include teens who are mature enough to
see this film."
The film focuses on the soldiers' individual and personal responses
to the war: Sgt. Nick Moncrief, a young squad leader with two kids and
a wife, breaks into a freestyle rap in front of the palace after an
attack; SPC Stuart Wilf, who joined the army at 17, spends his nights
with his guitar by the palace gate; and one of the female soldiers,
SPC Billie Grimes, tells of her experience as a combat medic. Told first-hand
by these troops and many others, GUNNER PALACE presents a thought provoking
portrait of a dangerous and chaotic war that is personal and highly
emotional.
"We feel we have a valid and strong case for appealing the 'R'
rating," said Palm Pictures founder Chris Blackwell. "We ask
that the MPAA consider the real world context in which the language
is used as well as the importance of allowing those using it to be heard
- unrestricted."
"In a time overwhelmed with the politicization of the war, GUNNER
PALACE shows how it really is for soldiers," says Paul Rieckhoff,
an Iraq War Veteran & Executive Director of Operation Truth. "This
is how soldiers feel, live, and sometimes, die. It is raw and real.
Every American with a conscience should see this film. See it and think
about what is going on."
About Palm Pictures
Palm Pictures (www.palmpictures.com) is a leader in the converging music,
digital media, theatrical and home video markets, emphasizing a compelling
slate of music documentaries, arthouse and foreign cinema, and original
audio/visual projects. Palm Pictures was founded in 1998 by Chris Blackwell,
an innovator in the entertainment business who founded Island Records,
Island Pictures and Island Outpost, and who was inducted into the Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame in 2001. Palm Pictures' entertainment properties
include a film and music division, Arthouse Films, RES Media Group,
sputnik7.com, and epitonic.com. Palm Pictures is headquartered in New
York City, with offices in Los Angeles and London.
Palm Pictures' current and recent theatrical releases include Kiyoshi
Kurosawa's BRIGHT FUTURE; Lou Ye's PURPLE BUTTERFLY starring Zhang Ziyi;
and Takeshi Kitano's DOLLS; Ondi Timoner's Sundance Grand Jury Prize
Winner DiG!; Christoffer Boe's Camera D'Or winner RECONSTRUCTION. Upcoming
releases include Andrew Horn's THE NOMI SONG; Iraq War documentary GUNNER
PALACE by Michael Tucker and Petra Epperlein; Sebastian Cordero's CRONICAS
starring John Leguizamo and produced by Alfonso Cuaron and Guillermo
del Toro; Margaret Brown's portrait of songwriter and artist Townes
Van Zandt - BE HERE TO LOVE ME: A FILM ABOUT TOWNES VAN ZANDT; Johnnie
To's BREAKING NEWS and PTU.