MovieChat Forums > MASH (1970) Discussion > TCM Airing Shower Scene

TCM Airing Shower Scene


I remember that scene being a little longer than what I just saw. And it seemed the cursing in Col. Blakes's tent right after it was edited. I had to make sure I wasn't watching AMC.

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I think TCM plays things unedited, they did drop a couple f-bombs and everything I remember was cut from commercial cable television was there. I think the longer shot of Hot Lips you may be thinking of is right at the end when they announced they cast. Maybe it just seems longer cause your eye knows where to look the 2nd time around.

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Could be, been a while since I have seen it.

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It was the way I've always seen it - not cut at all from what I remember.

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TCM DOES edit movies despite their claim that they don't. I didn't see "MASH" on there but I remember "The Night Digger" had the f word bleeped out and they shortened a lengthy scene with male nudity (which WAS necessary for the integrity of the film). I also remember them showing an edited version of "Rosemary's Baby" a few years back. So they might have edited "MASH"...or shown the PG version instead of the R rated original.

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What did they edit out of Rosemary's Baby? Far as I recall, the "worst" thing it showed in terms of violence/gore, was a small pool of blood next to a dead body on the sidewalk (RB of course has the distinction of being a horror movie with no on-screen deaths).



"facts are stupid things" Ronald Reagan

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There were more shots of the dead body and there was full frontal female nudity during the scene where Rosemary has sex with the Devil. I believe some profanity was snipped out too.

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TCM's policy is to air films uncut and uncensored. That's a fine ambition, but they don't always live up to it. Occasionally, they screen a TV print of a film that has been cleaned-up for commercial broadcast...and I've noticed this happening whenever they premiere an R-rated film for the first time. For example, when they first screened The Strawberry Statement (1970), it was the TV version with the nudity excised and the sound muted when the F-word was said.

I wish they had better quality control with regards to this.



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When they aired Twice Upon a Time, they aired a somewhat-edited version. There was a reason for this, though - the version with profanity (albeit nothing super-bad - it was PG) was NOT approved by the director, and was done after the movie had been finished and test screened (there's an article about it somewhere). When I say "somewhat-edited," I mean that most of the profanity was replaced by the director-approved clean dialogue, but a few instances remained.

I know of incident where TCM was mistakenly given a TV version of Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice by the studio. They rectified the situation by re-airing the unedited version at a later date. I've never known them to edit a movie before, though (aside from showing theatrical cuts instead of director's cuts, as they did with Spielberg's 1941 - I thought that was particularly bad, since Spielberg was unhappy with the studio's edits; they definitely didn't censor that movie, though, I will tell you that!)

"He kidnapped me! I have Patty Hearst Syndrome!"

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There might be other reasons. I suspect over time there have been times where an acceptable broadcast master from a technical perspective was one that had been edited later, especially in the mid-2000s during the transition from SD to HD.

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Youre making shit up.

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I saw "In the Heat of the Night" in a theater when it was released in the late 1960s, and as a teenager I was thrilled to see the nipples of the naked girl drinking a Coke in the window that Warren Oates was looking at from his squad car. On TCM, the shot with the nipples was gone.

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