I caught up with Dwayne Johnson during the Baywatch press day in Miami, Florida earlier today, and after discussing his collaboration with co-star Zac Efron, I turned the conversation to the R-rating. Given that Johnson has made movies for all demographics, I asked about his personal sensibilities and whether or not the new film was ever looking at a PG-13 rating. The wrestler-cum-actor acknowledged that the project was courting younger audiences when he was first considering the feature- but he convinced them of a different way to go. Said Johnson,
"There was [talk about making Baywatch PG-13]. Earlier on, when Paramount first came to me to make the movie -- this was about four-and-a-half, five years ago -- we had that discussion about PG-13 or Rated R. Now, it's a ballsy move if you go Rated-R, especially in the summer when you want as many ticket-buyers as possible, but we also felt the cooler version is Rated-R."
That wasn't the only change that Dwayne Johnson was able to inspire, however. In coming to Baywatch, the star really wanted to change expectations about what the film would be, and as he put it, "take models that worked in the past and then flip them." He explained,
"Let's go hard Rated-R; let's take the character that was our villain, it was written for a man, let's write it for a woman, and let's bring in Priyanka [Chopra]. And also the idea that I could make a movie and that it would be Rated-R and that we could lean into it, it's my sense of humor! Very dirty, raunchy humor. So to be able to do this, is great. From being able to go from Moana! Fantastic."
It's worth pointing out that the idea of making an R-rated version of a classic TV show is something that we have seen before -- but given the success of, for example, the 21 Jump Street movies, it certainly made sense as a natural path for Baywatch to follow. And it certainly won't be the last comedy to pivot in that direction.