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1/11/2026 // SUBJECT: Three Plus Two (1963) film rating and content Processing: 58.8s
Source: Gemini 2.5 Flash + Search
Analysis: gemini-3-pro-preview
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#Q ORIGINAL QUESTION

Regarding the film Three Plus Two (1963), what was the film rated (e.g. R, PG, G), and what elements of the film contributed to that rating?

#M ANNOTATED LLM RESPONSE

The film Three Plus Two (1963), a Soviet-era romantic comedy, does not carry a formal rating from systems like the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) (e.g., R, PG, G) or the modern Russian Age Rating System (RARS).

The movie is generally designated as Not Rated (NR) by modern distribution platforms, but its content is universally considered suitable for general audiences (akin to a modern G or PG rating).

Rating Context

The film was produced in the Soviet Union in 1963. At that time, the Soviet film industry operated under a system of state approval and ideological censorship rather than a public, letter-based age-classification system. Films were largely intended for a broad, family-friendly audience, and were often approved based on their promotion of culture and communist ideals, not restricted content.

Contributing Elements for an All-Ages/General Audience Classification

The elements of Three Plus Two that contribute to its highly accessible nature (equivalent to a modern G or light PG rating) are consistent with its genre as a classic Soviet romantic comedy:

#F CORRECTION FEED (CLICK TO SEARCH)

[1] The film was never submitted to the MPAA and is listed as Not Rated in Western databases.
[2] Modern Russian broadcasts and DVD releases mandate an age rating. 'Three Plus Two' is typically rated 12+ (sometimes 6+) under RARS, largely due to smoking and alcohol depictions.
[3] The 12+ rating in Russia indicates it is not considered 'general audience' (0+) in its home country today, primarily due to stricter modern laws regarding the depiction of smoking and alcohol, which are present in the film.

#O MISSED POINTS & OVERSIGHTS

High
RARS Rating Existence

The summary explicitly stated the film does not carry a RARS rating, which is factually incorrect for modern Russia.

Medium
Smoking/Alcohol Content

The summary failed to mention smoking and alcohol use, which are key factors in its modern 12+ rating.

Low
Soviet Distribution Categories

The summary missed the nuance of the Soviet 'Category' system (I, II, III) which was financial rather than age-based.

#C RELATED QUERIES

#01 Why is Three Plus Two rated 12+ in Russia?
#02 Did Soviet films have age ratings in the 1960s?
#03 What are the Soviet film distribution categories I, II, and III?

#S SOURCES

jcu.edu prokowall.com cyberleninka.ru filmmakermagazine.com popmatters.com mubi.com nymag.com researchgate.net gw2ru.com researchgate.net eesiag.com cyberleninka.ru wikipedia.org

#R ORIGINAL AI RESPONSE

#A DIRECT ANSWER (VERIFIED ANALYSIS)