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Southpaw is a 2015 American sports drama film directed by Antoine Fuqua, written by Kurt Sutter and starring Jake Gyllenhaal, Forest Whitaker and Rachel McAdams. The film follows a boxer who sets out to get his life back on track after losing his wife to gun violence and later his young daughter to child protective services.
Under this rating system, content may be assigned multiple ratings, with one signifying a minimum age of attendance, and the other signifying the minimum age of unaccompanied attendance. [164] [165] In addition to the age ratings, content is also assessed for violence/horror, sexuality and negative examples i.e. drugs, vulgar and slang language.
A content rating (also known as maturity rating) [1] [2] rates the suitability of TV shows, movies, comic books, or video games to this primary targeted audience. [3] [4] [5] A content rating usually places a media source into one of a number of different categories, to show which age group is suitable to view media and entertainment.
A television content rating system in Brazil was implemented following a consultation in 2006. [6] Since then, the television networks themselves rate the shows, while the indicative rating (Portuguese: Classificação Indicativa) judges the content to guarantee that the rating is appropriate for that specific show. [7]
Beau Christian Knapp (born April 17, 1989) is an American actor. He is known for his roles in The Signal (2014), Run All Night (2015), and Southpaw (2015). [1] Knapp portrayed a lead villain in Death Wish (2018), the sixth installment of the Death Wish series. [2]
The Southpaw, a 1952 novel by Mark Harris; Southpaw (comics), a fictional character in the Marvel comic She-Hulk; Southpaw, a 2015 film starring Jake Gyllenhaal; Southpaw: The Francis Barrett Story, 1999 documentary film about boxer Francie Barrett
The movie is rated R for "language throughout, some sexual content and graphic nudity." ... Common Sense Media, which independently reviews films for their age appropriateness, ...
The United States pay television content advisory system is a television content rating system developed cooperatively by the American pay television industry; it first went into effect on March 1, 1994, on cable-originated premium channels owned by the system's principal developers, Home Box Office, Inc. and Showtime Networks.