Close X
Tuesday, November 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Theatre Owners Tie Up Fifty Shades Showing Because Of 18A Rating

The Canadian Press, 13 Feb, 2015 12:59 PM
    SECHELT, B.C. — Owners of a small-town theatre on British Columbia's Sunshine Coast have thrown a kink into the plans of movie goers bent on seeing Fifty Shades of Grey. 
     
    Deborah Proby of the Raven’s Cry Theatre in Sechelt, B.C., says in an email she won't show the film.
     
    The black-and-white decision that's receiving coverage in B.C. media outlets appears to be tied to the movie's 18A rating, which Proby says would have forced her to sell tickets to minors. 
     
    She says adults can still find many other ways to see the movie, just not at her theatre.
     
    Proby says she doesn't wish to "save the world," and did not intend to trigger a reaction.
     
    The move, which opens in theatres on Friday, is an adaptation of the E L James book about a college student and her torrid affair with a 27-year-old billionaire with a penchant for bondage, discipline, sadism and masochism.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Two people rescued while searching for friend on Vancouver-area mountain

    Two people rescued while searching for friend on Vancouver-area mountain
    VANCOUVER — Rescue crews have saved two people who ventured out on their own to search for a missing friend on Vancouver's North Shore mountains.

    Two people rescued while searching for friend on Vancouver-area mountain

    Bill Cosby forced to confront abuse allegations in midst of Ontario show

    Bill Cosby forced to confront abuse allegations in midst of Ontario show
    LONDON, Ont. — Bill Cosby was forced to publicly confront the sexual assault allegations that have dogged him for weeks when a heckler at the second stop on his three-city Canadian tour yelled out a direct accusation.

    Bill Cosby forced to confront abuse allegations in midst of Ontario show

    Teen shot in head at Eaton Centre recalls 'total darkness' in impact statement

    Teen shot in head at Eaton Centre recalls 'total darkness' in impact statement
    TORONTO — More than two years, four surgeries and 1,200 stitches later, a teenager shot in the head in a crowded downtown food court recalled on Friday what little he remembers of the attack that left him so close to death.

    Teen shot in head at Eaton Centre recalls 'total darkness' in impact statement

    NDP veteran Yvon Godin won't seek re-election in his N.B. seat

    NDP veteran Yvon Godin won't seek re-election in his N.B. seat
    OTTAWA — Veteran New Democrat MP Yvon Godin says he won't run in this year's federal election.

    NDP veteran Yvon Godin won't seek re-election in his N.B. seat

    History museum pays $300,000 to N.S. man for world's oldest known hockey stick

    History museum pays $300,000 to N.S. man for world's oldest known hockey stick
    GATINEAU, Que. — The Canadian Museum of History has acquired what it believes is the world's oldest known hockey stick.

    History museum pays $300,000 to N.S. man for world's oldest known hockey stick

    First trials of Ebola vaccines suggest they are safe; next phase next month: WHO

    First trials of Ebola vaccines suggest they are safe; next phase next month: WHO
    The first clinical trial designed to see if two experimental Ebola vaccines actually work may begin in late January and two others are slated to start in February in West Africa, the World Health Organization said Friday.

    First trials of Ebola vaccines suggest they are safe; next phase next month: WHO