I just cancelled Disney+ and went with HBO Max. I've already seen what I want to see from Disney, which is the MCU, and a couple hidden gems like The World According To Jeff Goldblum. HBO Max seems to have a lot more content I'm interested in, especially with the new Matrix coming out next week, streaming on the same day as it's theatrical release.
One of HBO's partnerships is with TCM, so they have a bunch of great pre-code stuff I want to see. Problem is, they rate them like regular films. You know, PG, PG-13, R, NC-17, and NR. I am no purist when it comes to films. I'll watch colorized and remastered classics all day long. This particular change strikes me as deeply unfair, and misleading, though.
Take King Kong, for example. King Kong was one of the films that inspired the code, when it shocked people by having the ape undress a woman. HBO rates it as PG. If they rated it when it came out, they would have rated it much more harshly. We expect this kind of thing, though. An R rated film from 30 years ago isn't the same as an R rated film in 2021. Film makers change their films all the time, to get the ratings they want. Judging films by rubrics that did not exist when they were released gives the film makers no chance to do that, and it holds them up to modern standards that did not exist at the time.
For the sake of clarity and fairness, I think they should have a rating designation that denotes pre-code. King Kong should be rated PC, for pre-code.