Monday, 3 December 2012

Film censorship - Miss B



Film censorship

 

The British Board of Film Classification (BBFC), originally British Board of Film Censors, is a non-governmental organisation, funded by the film industry and responsible for the national classification of films within the United Kingdom. It has a statutory requirement to classify videos, DVDs and some video games under the Video Recordings Act 2010.

 

The BBFC rates theatrically released films, and rated videos and video games that forfeited exemption from the Video Recordings Act 1984, which was discovered in August 2009 to be unenforceable until the act was re-enacted by the Video Recordings Act 2010. Legally, local authorities have the power to decide under what circumstances films are shown in cinemas, but they nearly always choose to follow the advice of the BBFC.

 

The Video Recordings Act requires that video releases not exempt (music, documentary, non-fiction, video games, etc.) under the Act had to be classified, making it illegal to supply any recording that had not been certified. Certificates could restrict release to any age of 18 or under, or to only licensed sex-shops. The government currently designate the BBFC as the authority for certifying video releases. As the law requires the certificate to be displayed on the packaging and media labels of the video recording, in practice only UK releases can be legally sold or hired in the UK, even if a foreign release had identical content.

By being able to censor films they give an age rating in which only that age rating classification and above could be able to watch the film.

 

As an overall I have learnt that it is very important to censor films in every prospective, because children should not be able to see such scenes as sexual and violent scenes. So it has taught me that we have to censor our film properly.

2 comments:

  1. Good introduction about the BBFC and who they are, but this post should develop ideas about film censorship, as you have another post about age certificates.

    Refer back to the contents of the lesson, and you post should include information on the following things:
    -Why is the role of the BBFC important to the film industry?
    -What things get censored and why? (examples)
    -What is the difference between films being cut and banned?
    -Use examples to support your work
    -Discuss the Forna and Kemode debate, and then discuss where your own opinions lie on this matter.
    -Conclude with what you have learned about film regulation and what you need to consider for your own thillers.

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  2. Berkay, no evidence of trying to improve on your work here

    ReplyDelete