When I was a kid, I managed to see THE GODFATHER, THE FRENCH CONNECTION, THE EXORCIST and ROSEMARY'S BABY -- all rated R, snd all thanks to MAD Magazine and the brilliant talents of Mort Drucker, Dick DeBartolo and others. There, by way of eight meticulously drawn pages, I "saw" films restricted to audience members under the age of seventeen (without a legal guardian.)
Whoa, you say -- I just read a MAD movie spoof and it was a lame-o pale comparison to the movie it was mocking, but that's because things have changed. Hugely. Back in the seventies and eighties, MAD movie satires not only presented plot-point by plot-point recountings of the film's story but the panels so perfectly reflected the screen images -- from the actors to the locations to the angles -- that it was like seeing the world's best story board panels. Satires were eight pages not four, and there was one in every issue -- not every third issue. What's more, back in those days, the magazine satirized films that appealed to an adult audience (see above list.) -- then again, that was the film-going crowd... there was no teen market to speak of.
Oh, and the above panel is classic Mort Drucker, taken from the
2001: A Space Odyssey satire, or as the magazine affectionately called it:
201: (Minutes) of Space Idiocy. My good friend Craig McNamara forwarded an article from FILM COMMENT on this very subject:
http://filmcomment.com/article/mad-magazine-movie-parodies