No. "Rated R" means no one under 17 unless accompanied by parent or legal guardian.
No. Unless a parent is present and approves of the viewing, no one under 17 years of age can enter an R-rated showing.
yes
There's no such thing as an m rated movie. That's video games. For video games you have to get a parent to tell the sales person it okay but yes. And movies theres Not Rated, G, PG, PG-13 and R. I'm also 13 and your not supposed to watch rated R movies but if your parents okay it and are fine with it yeah. But always check with them first.
Yes, but only for Rated G movies.
Yes, R rated movies require an adult to accompany minors under 17.
At the age of fourteen, most kids are rather impressionable. They're beginning to forge their own identity and as such will 'try on' different personalities until they find one that fits fairly well or one that makes them popular. If they are regularly watching R-rated films that portray such things as drug use and sexual promiscuity as 'what the cool kids are doing', they will emulate that behaviour. Your question is one that different people will disagree about. I have made my case for the answer "no", because that is what I believe to be the appropriate answer. If anyone has a different take on the issue, I welcome them to add it to the answer.
No, the ratings exist for a reason.
Only if your parents approve and go with you.
yes
Depends on how mature they are and what type of stuff it has in it.
Hundreds
There's no such thing as an m rated movie. That's video games. For video games you have to get a parent to tell the sales person it okay but yes. And movies theres Not Rated, G, PG, PG-13 and R. I'm also 13 and your not supposed to watch rated R movies but if your parents okay it and are fine with it yeah. But always check with them first.
There were 189 R rated films released in 2013. That is 30% of all movies released with this rating.
yes, they should. m rated games really are not that bad although parrents may think so.
between 5 and 20
Only if it is rated G.
Hopefully none.
Yes, but only for Rated G movies.