DVD Learn more
Enter a zip code
Emilio Estevez and Charlie Sheen commentary track; Filmographies; Interview segments; Still gallery; Closed captioning
Full Product DetailsScene Index.
0. Scene Index.
0. Menu Group #1 with 26 chapter(s) covering 01:54:57
1. Brothers-a Lesson Learned [6:40]
2. San Francisco State-1967 [3:23]
3. Stage "a" [4:33]
4. O'farrell Theater, 1970 [4:16]
5. "we're Filmmakers" [3:23]
6. Wedding Day [1:07]
7. Busted [4:32]
8. Day In Court [5:27]
9. Marlyn Discovered [6:24]
10. "something Wrong With You" [3:12]
11. "green Door" Premier [5:11]
12. Pirated Film [4:07]
13. Goodbye Artie [7:42]
14. Another Wedding [4:03]
15. Goodbye Dad [5:31]
16. New O'farrell Theater 1978 [5:08]
17. Back In Court [2:57]
18. Cape Cod, Mass [3:32]
19. Suspicion [5:40]
20. Welcome Back [8:49]
21. Corte Madera, Ca 1990 [4:43]
22. A Rainy Night [5:30]
23. Late Night Visit [4:37]
24. Credits [4:07]
Martin Sheen progeny Emilio Estevez and Charlie Sheen -- the original cinematic Men at Work -- reunite in front of and behind the camera for Rated X, an appropriately sordid true-life tale of another pair of cinematic brothers, Jim and Artie Mitchell, the San Francisco porn kings whose empire was destroyed by narcotics. There is genuine fraternal energy between Estevez and Sheen driving the film, which seems at times like a Boogie Nights knockoff/homage. (Indeed, entire shots from director Paul Thomas Anderson's film are repeated almost verbatim here). A film student in San Francisco in the late '60s, Jim Mitchell (Estevez) witnesses the local tableau of drug-induced sexual liberation, and decides to turn a profit by filming this hippie titillation. With his younger brother Artie (Sheen) in tow as business partner, the Mitchells buy a theater and establish themselves as Northern California's kings of smut, capping their rise with Behind the Green Door, a nearly silent film that made Marilyn Chambers a star. Their downfall begins with the production of a hilarious, hallucinogenic, unintelligible pornographic rendering of Sodom and Gomorrah (involving UFOs) and catalyzes with Artie's nonstop cocaine snorting, which leaves him distraught and paranoid. Brotherly bonds shine through the debauchery, with Estevez showing surprising restraint in his performance and Sheen -- a self-proclaimed wild man -- giving his blow-based tantrums a shocking, method-like quality. Barnes & Noble
More reviews and recommendations