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For nearly the entire history of film production, certain films have been banned by film censorship or review organizations for political or moral reasons or for controversial content, such as racism. Censorship standards vary widely by country, and can vary within an individual country over time due to political or moral change.
Many countries have government-appointed or private commissions to censor and rate productions for film and television exhibition. While it is common for films to be edited to fall into certain rating classifications, this list includes only films that have been explicitly prohibited from public screening.
During the five-year reign of the Islamic Emirate government in Afghanistan, Western technology and art was prohibited and this included all films.[1][2][3][4]
Banned for ten years under Communist regime.[5]
Banned from all Arab League states because actress Haya Harareet was an Israeli. It is also banned in mainland China.[6]
Banned in the United Arab Republic due to actor Paul Newman's "material support for Zionism and Israel".[6]
Pulled from distribution in Lebanon before premiere on account of the film's lead star Gal Gadot's service in the Israeli Army, leading to a campaign against her and in accordance with a decades-old law that boycotts Israeli products and bars Lebanese citizens from traveling to Israel or having contacts with Israelis. Lebanon and Israel are also in a state of war.[7] Due to the Arab League boycott of Israel, it is also banned in Qatar and Tunisia.[8][9]
Banned during the conservative period of authoritarian governments known as "Infamous Decade" (1930–1943), for lampooning Nazi Germany; Argentina had declared itself neutral during World War Two.[10]
Banned during the self-styled "Argentine Revolution" dictatorship (1966–1973), for being "pornographic".[11]
Banned under Isabel Perón's government (1974–1976) and Jorge Rafael Videla's regime during Argentina's last-civil military dictatorship (1976–1983). The historical film is about the suppression of a peasants' revolt, known as "Tragic Patagonia".[11]
Banned under Videla's regime during Argentina's last-civil military dictatorship (1976–1983).[12][13][14]
Banned under Videla's regime during Argentina's last-civil military dictatorship (1976–1983), for mocking dictatorships.[11]
Banned under Videla's regime during Argentina's last-civil military dictatorship (1976–1983), for its sarcastic view of Francoist Spain.[11]
Banned under Videla's regime during Argentina's last-civil military dictatorship (1976–1983), for being "pornographic".[11]
Banned under Videla's regime during Argentina's last-civil military dictatorship (1976–1983), for being "pornographic".[11]
Banned under Videla's regime during Argentina's last-civil military dictatorship (1976–1983), for its anti-war message.[11]
Banned under Videla's regime during Argentina's last-civil military dictatorship (1976–1983), because it depicts the hunt for Nazi criminal Adolf Eichmann.[11]
Banned due to "blasphemous" and sexual content.[15]
Banned for being considered as "blasphemy".[16][17][18]
Banned for its controversial themes, scenes of nudity and unsimulated oral sex. A court order required all copies of the film to be seized and a ban on its exhibition.[19] The film was finally shown in a restored copy in 2010, as part of the Mar del Plata International Film Festival.[20]
Banned on its initial release until the 1980s due to offensive content.[21]
Banned on its initial release,[11] but lifted after seventeen years.[22]
Banned because of obscenity, though a censored version was made available in 1977. Only in 2000 did it finally become available in its complete cut.[23][24]
Banned and refused classification in 2003 for graphic depictions of teenage sex, incest, and auto-erotic asphyxiation.[25]
Temporarily banned for cruel, disturbing, and sexually explicit content. A censored DVD version was later released on February 23, 2012.[26][27][28][29][30][31]
Banned because the plot presents Armenians in a positive light.[32]
Banned because of an inaccurate depiction of a 1996 bombing in Saudi Arabia.[33]
Banned due to depiction of prophets.[34]
La Kermesse Heroïque (Carnival in Flanders) (1935)
Banned in Nazi-occupied Belgium by Joseph Goebbels because of its pacifist themes. The director, Jacques Feyder, was later hunted down for arrest but managed to hide in Switzerland.[35]
Banned on its initial release because of its graphic sex scenes, being the last film subject to censorship in the country.[36] It was the only European country at that time where the film was banned.[37][38] Since 1994[39] the ban is no longer in effect.[40]
Banned by the Getúlio Vargas dictatorship for being "communist" and "demoralizing the Armed Forces".[41]
Film banned in 1969 for criticizing the ruling military dictatorship. The original 35mm film was seized by the authorities and later destroyed.[42][43] For these reasons, the film was lost until 2017, when a 16mm copy was restored and re-released in DVD in Brazil.[44][45][46]
Banned during the military dictatorship for containing obscenity and "promiscuous content". A censored version of black polka dots covering the breasts and genitals of the actors in the nude scenes became available in the country in 1978.[47][48]
Banned during the military dictatorship for containing obscene scenes that were considered by the government as an "attempt against morality and good habits". Ban lifted in 1979.[49][50]
Banned during the military dictatorship for containing violent scenes that were considered by the government as an "attempt against morality and good habits". Ban lifted in the early 1980s.[51][52]
Banned during the military dictatorship for explicit sexual content.[53]
Banned due to a court decision obtained by the adopted daughter of the painter Di Cavalcanti, Elizabeth Di Cavalcanti, alleging that her father's image was violated due to the film containing scenes from the painter's funeral and burial.[54][55] However, in 2004, members of the family of the filmmaker Glauber Rocha, made the work available in full version on a server outside Brazil, to circumvent the film's ban.[56]
Banned at the time of its release for containing political criticism of the military dictatorship.[57] Ban lifted a year later.[58]
Banned during the government of president José Sarney for containing blasphemy against the Christian faith.[59] Ban lifted after the promulgation of the new Brazilian Constitution in 1988.[60]
Banned in Brazil due to a lawsuit filed by Roberto Marinho.[61]
Banned due to it being an "apology for pedophilia" and extreme violence.[62] The film was shown at the VII Fantastic Film Festival in Porto Alegre and was selected for the Fantastic Film Festival in Rio de Janeiro.[63][64] However, it was removed from the event's schedule by order of Caixa, the festival's sponsor. A new screening of the film was scheduled by the organizers of the event outside the festival,[65] but the copy of the film was seized by a court order, thanks to a lawsuit filed by the regional office of the Democrats party.[66] Ban lifted in July 2012.[67]
Privarzaniyat balon (The Tied Up Balloon)
Banned during the Communist era for criticizing the communist leaders during World War II.[68][69][70] After Bulgaria became a democratic nation again, in 1990, the ban was lifted.[68][70]
Banned for putting Cambodia in a negative light.[71]
Banned for investigating the mysterious 2004 assassination of Chea Vichea, one of Cambodia's most influential union leaders who spent years fighting for increased wages and improved working conditions for the nation's 300,000 garment workers.[72]
Banned for "insane romance, numerous sex sequence, the use of violence during sex" and for being "entirely related to sexual matters that are too extreme for Khmer society".[73][74]
Banned for its "negative portrayal of local culture".[75][76]
Banned for portraying Cambodia as a base for the movie's antagonists.[77]
Banned since 15 April 2015, when the Russian film distributor Central Partnership announced that the film would be withdrawn from cinemas in Russia, although some media stated that screening of the film was blocked by the Russian Ministry of Culture.[78][79][80] The decision was made following the press screening the day before. The Ministry of Culture and the Central Partnership issued a joint press release stating that the screening of the film before the 70th anniversary of the Victory Day was unacceptable.[81] The Ministry of Culture claimed that it received several questions on the film's contents, primarily concerning "distortion of historical facts, peculiar treatment of events before, during and after the Great Patriotic War and images and characters of Soviet people of that era".[81] Russian minister of culture Vladimir Medinsky welcomed the decision, but stressed that it was made solely by the Central Partnership. However, in his personal statement Medinsky complained that the film depicts Russians as "physically and morally base sub-humans", and compared the depiction of Soviet Union in the film with J. R. R. Tolkien's Mordor, and wished that such films should be screened neither before the 70th anniversary of the victory in the Great Patriotic War, nor any other time.[82] However, he also stated that the film would be available in Russia on DVD and online.[83] As a result of the decision the film was also withdrawn from cinemas in Belarus,[84] Ukraine,[85] Kazakhstan,[86] and Kyrgyzstan, while release of the film has been postponed until October in Georgia.[87]
Banned under the Communist regime for depicting a restrictive environment, which was similar to living under the regime.[88]
Banned under the Communist regime for "depicting the wanton".[89][90] The film's director, Věra Chytilová, was forbidden from working again until 1975.[90][91]
Banned under the Communist regime from 1966 to 1968 because the film is an allegory of totalitarian regimes. After a short release during the Prague Spring, it was banned again for the next twenty years. In 1974, director Jan Němec was forced to leave the country.[92]
Banned by the Czechoslovak Communist government in 1968 for its satire of the East European communist system..[92][93][better source needed]
Deserters and Pilgrims (also known as The Deserters and the Nomads)
Banned by the Czechoslovak Communist government.[92]
Banned by the Czechoslovak Communist government.[92]
The Seventh Day, The Eighth Night (Den sedmý, osmá noc)
Banned by the Czechoslovak Communist government.[92][94]
Banned by the Czechoslovak Communist government for twenty years, with its director, Drahomíra Vihanová, being banned from making new films until 1977.[92]
Banned by the Czechoslovak Communist government from 1969 until 1989 because this black comedy depicts a crematorium director who enjoys burning people and sides with the Nazis during the Holocaust. Apart from this theme, the story can be interpreted for remaining true to individual morality, something that was a dangerous message.[95][96][97]
All My Compatriots (also known as All My Countrymen)
Banned by the Czechoslovak Communist government.[92] Its director, Vojtěch Jasný went into exile.
Banned by the Czechoslovak Communist government for depicting three people orphaned by political violence and trying to mentally survive, despite not being free.[92]
Banned under the Communist regime from 1969 until the fall of the regime in 1989.[98][99]
Banned by the Czechoslovak Communist government.[92]
Banned by the Czechoslovak Communist government for its shocking content. Its director, Vera Chytilová, was forbidden from making new films for eight years.[92][100]
Banned by the Czechoslovak Communist government.[92]
Banned by the Czechoslovak Communist government until 1989, because the story depicts a couple who think they are under government surveillance.[92]
Banned by the Czechoslovak Communist government.[92]
Banned by the Czechoslovak Communist government for its satirical depiction of Czech society, which meant the end of the director Pavel Juráček's career.[92][101]
Banned by the Communist government for depicting life in Czechoslovakia in a critical light. Its director, Jan Švankmajer, was banned from working for five years. When the ban was lifted, he was only allowed to make adaptations of literary works.[102]
Banned by the Czechoslovak Communist government. The director, Věra Chytilová, personally asked for more information at the censor board and heard that the Soviet embassy felt the subject matter was "too heavy-duty".[92]
Banned by the Czechoslovak Communist government after its director, Jan Švankmajer, refused to change anything about the film. Government censors objected to its mockumentary tone, which could undermine peoples' faith in the TV news. Švankmajer himself was banned from making films for eight years.[103]
Banned because the Communist government censors didn't like its criticism of consumerism. The ban was more than likely also a result of its director, Jan Švankmajer, having been banned twice before in the past.[102]
Straka v hrsti (A Magpie in the Hand)
Banned by the Communist government because the film was based on a script by Antonín Přidal, an author who was banned by the regime, and because it featured the subversive rock band Pražský výběr.[97]
L'Homme Qui Repare Les Femmes (The Man Who Mends Women)
Banned without a reason given. The documentary is about Congolese gynaecologist Denis Mukwege, whose hospital treats rape victims.[104]
Banned initially in 1930 because the censors deemed the film "too macabre".[105] Today the ban is no longer in effect.
Banned because the Egyptian Muslim lead (Omar Sharif) is portrayed in a romantic storyline with Jewish actress Barbra Streisand. Streisand's political support for Israel at the height of military tensions between Egypt and Israel was also a factor.[106][107]
Banned because of blasphemous content.[22]
Banned right after screening the film in cinemas, after criticism over scenes deemed sexually provocative. The movie was criticized for copying Giuseppe Tornatore's movie Malena (2000) starring Italian actress Monica Bellucci.[108][109]
Banned due to racial themes towards Fijians.[110]
Banned out of fear of inciting a Communist revolution.[10][111]
Banned during World War II and finally released on March 31, 1950.[113]
Banned for its depiction of cracking security safes. The government feared it might inspire copycat crimes. The ban was lifted after five years.[16][better source needed]
Banned for 24 years due to its political satire, which could offend their ally and neighbouring country, the Soviet Union. (Finland had a policy of Finlandization).[114][115]
Banned by the Finnish Board of Film in June 1969 for violence.[116] Ban was lifted in February 1989 after several minutes of cuts. The film was still rated as K18 (suitable for adults only) and as such VHS versions of the film were also not allowed. The film has never received a proper premier in Finland although it has been aired three times in television (1994, 1999 and 2009).[117]
Banned on its initial release in 1971 for violence and content which could potentially be hazardous to mental health. The decision to ban was ultimately taken to highest available court which did not lift the ban. A second round of banning was then seen in 1985 and the government officials used the same exact phrasing in their decision to ban as was done 14 years earlier. The ban was finally automatically lifted after a law change in 2001.[118]
Banned by the Finnish Board of Film. In 1972 and 1974 Swedish television showed the film, resulting in the Swedish television mast on the Åland Islands being shut down during the movie because Finns were banned from seeing the film. Director of the Finnish Board of Film, Jerker Eeriksson, said that the banning of the film was political because it harmed the Finnish-Soviet relationship. Finnish television showed the film in 1996 on the TV1 YLE channel.[119][120]
Banned on Feb-1972 for violence and mental health reasons. The distributor challenged the banning and took the decision to ban to Finnish Supreme administrative Court which ruled against banning. After minor cuts, it was banned again. A second round of court cases (again, won by the distributor) forced the banning authorities to allow the film to be distributed. They did so but only after mandatory cuts of over three minutes. Finally in Jan-1973 the cut film premiered in Finland.[121]
Banned because of graphic violence.[123]
This film is entirely banned for the inclusion of scenes of genuine human death.[citation needed]
Banned in 1976 for moral, mental health and appropriateness reasons. The banning renewed again in 1984 with the defined exception of two specific screenings by the Finnish Film Archive. Finally a law change in 2001 removed the ban.[124]
Banned on its initial release until a law change in 2001 when it automatically reverted to a K18 (adults only) classification.[125]
Banned on its initial release. A considerably shortened version was allowed in 1991 with a K16 classification (allowed for persons over the age of 16).[126]
Banned for violence for 4 months until a cut version (around 2 minutes of cuts) was allowed with a classification of K18 (adults only).[127]
Banned on Jan-1986 for its violence and for political reasons.[128] The political reasons were that the movie was "potentially harmful to international relations". A court appeal to Finnish Supreme administrative Court decided against the banning (after some cuts would be made) and authorities were forced to dismantle the ban (with more cuts) and the movie premiered in late Dec-1986 after a struggle of almost a year. 20 years after the movie was banned, it was revealed (by a politics researcher and academic Juhani Suomi in his book "Kohti sinipunaa") that the authorities were in fact "instructed" to ban the film and that the banning was dictated by the Soviet Union's ambassador Vladimir Sobolev.[129] Born American was the last movie in Finland to suffer banning for political reasons.
Banned for violence in 1986; it took six years after the film's release for any distributor to even try to get a classification. A law change in 2001 finally lifted the ban.[130]
Banned due to fears that it could inspire revolution.[131]
Banned in Paris by the police prefect "in the name of public order."[132]
Banned because of a plot where pupils take over a repressive school. The ban remained in effect under Nazi occupation for the same reason.[133][134]
Banned from 1945 until 1947, because the film was produced under the Nazi regime with financial support too. It was also seen as a negative portrayal of French people and accused of harboring sympathies for the Vichy regime. After two years, however, the ban was lifted again.[16][better source needed][135]
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