

The current status of the BARSOOM filing isīased on Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc., the BARSOOM The legal correspondent for BARSOOM trademark is The BARSOOM mark is filed in the category ofĬomputer Product, Electrical & Scientific Products Trademark Application Number is a unique ID to identify the BARSOOM mark in EUIPO. The BARSOOM trademark was assigned an Application Number # 010715316 – by the European Union Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO). A character is given a drink that enables him to understand the locals.BARSOOM European Union Trademark Information By Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc. Men are shown with drinks in a bar setting. The script contains about a dozen mild profanities and terms of Deity. A man’s bare buttocks are briefly seen when he is thrown into a bathtub. Soldiers and others dress in skimpy clothing. Soldiers are vaporized with a special weapon. An animal is kicked and beaten with sticks. Bruises and bloody injuries result from fights. A man cuts through an attacker with a sword. Characters are forced into an arena to fight. One man is beheaded and another loses an arm. During war scenes, characters are shot, stabbed, kicked, crushed and beaten.

A character threatens another with a gun. Men beat a prisoner and thrown him in a cell.

Shots are fired between warring airships. Why is John Carter rated PG-13? John Carter is rated PG-13 by the MPAA for intense sequences of violence and action. Starring Taylor Kitsch, Lynn Collins, Samantha Morton, Mark Strong, Ciaran Hinds, Thomas Hayden Church, Willem Dafoe. For older teen and adult sci-fi fans that can handle the interplanetary warfare, lassoing a ticket for John Carter might just be worth it. While there is nothing new there, the inclusion of a little romance, a bit of comedy and some unlikely cooperation give this script a spur over similar movies in this genre. Like the humans in Avatar, John becomes a savior figure for a race that can’t save themselves.

The amount of violence is unfortunate since profanities are few and sexual content is confined mostly to skimpy costumes.īased on a novel that marks its centennial anniversary this year (2012), the film is reminiscent of the pulp fiction of that bygone era, combining space adventures and Westerns, but with better weaponry than Cowboys and Aliens offered.
#BARSOOM CLOTHING MOVIE#
What ensues is military mayhem between characters that could be out of a Star Wars movie or the animation Up(the slobbering dog-not the Boy Scout.) In the course of fighting, appendages are sliced off, dead bodies pile up and a man cuts his way through a monstrous attacker to emerge blue and bloody on the other side. (And what swashbuckler can avoid a beautiful damsel in distress.) Luckily for her, the scrappy John Carter mysteriously arrives on the Red Planet just when she needs him.
