Latest News
- Is Adam Lambert a 'Role Model' or 'Nightmare'?
- New Moon Stars Recall Their First Kisses
- Donny Osmond Wins Dancing With the Stars!
- Lady Gaga Does It for the Freaks
- Dancing Judge Carrie Ann Inaba to Undergo Surgery
- Kristin and Justin-Bobby’s Vegas Bootie Call
- Nicole Richie: I Need to Stay in Bed and Recover
Top Five Most Read Stories This Week
LAST UPDATE: Wednesday November 25, 2009 10:11AM EST
PEOPLE Top 5 are the most-viewed stories on the site over the past three days, updated every 60 minutes
George Clooney doesn't want the moon in his new sci-fi film "Solaris" to get all the attention.
The movie, which opens this week, drew considerable attention when its R rating was challenged by the film's director, Steven Soderbergh, and studio 20th Century Fox.
The rating was based on a couple scenes in which the 41-year-old Clooney's backside is bare -- which Soderbergh and the studio claimed wasn't enough to merit the more-mature designation. The Motion Picture Association of America, which determines film ratings, eventually relented and agreed to release "Solaris" with a PG-13 rating. Makers of the film hope the lower rating will draw larger audiences, but now Clooney is concerned the attention will be focused primarily on his posterior.
"Fox leaked the story about the MPAA rating on 'Solaris,' how we got an R because I showed my (behind), but I think they're having trouble selling this film. They don't know what to do with it," Clooney tells Newsday.
According to an Associated Press report, Clooney speculated that the question he would most likely be asked during interviews for the film would be, "So you're naked. Did you work out?"
"I find it funny because we're trying to talk about things on a much grander scale, with a story that contains questions about the cosmos, and it'll come down to a 30-second sound bite where I say, 'Yeah, I worked out,'" Clooney said.
"Solaris," a remake of the 1972 science-fiction thriller by Russian director Andrei Tarkovsky, stars Clooney as a psychologist sent to a space station to investigate the crew's mental fitness, and ends up seeing images of his wife who committed suicide.
The movie, which opens this week, drew considerable attention when its R rating was challenged by the film's director, Steven Soderbergh, and studio 20th Century Fox.
The rating was based on a couple scenes in which the 41-year-old Clooney's backside is bare -- which Soderbergh and the studio claimed wasn't enough to merit the more-mature designation. The Motion Picture Association of America, which determines film ratings, eventually relented and agreed to release "Solaris" with a PG-13 rating. Makers of the film hope the lower rating will draw larger audiences, but now Clooney is concerned the attention will be focused primarily on his posterior.
"Fox leaked the story about the MPAA rating on 'Solaris,' how we got an R because I showed my (behind), but I think they're having trouble selling this film. They don't know what to do with it," Clooney tells Newsday.
According to an Associated Press report, Clooney speculated that the question he would most likely be asked during interviews for the film would be, "So you're naked. Did you work out?"
"I find it funny because we're trying to talk about things on a much grander scale, with a story that contains questions about the cosmos, and it'll come down to a 30-second sound bite where I say, 'Yeah, I worked out,'" Clooney said.
"Solaris," a remake of the 1972 science-fiction thriller by Russian director Andrei Tarkovsky, stars Clooney as a psychologist sent to a space station to investigate the crew's mental fitness, and ends up seeing images of his wife who committed suicide.
PeopleTVDaughtry: How He Knew She Was 'The One'
4 More Ways to Get PEOPLE!
Advertisement
Today's Latest Photos 11.25.09
Promotion
Treat Yourself! 4 Preview Issues
Today!





