Strands#265 Did You Hear That?
Quizzes & Puzzles13 mins ago
//Sex scenes that were previously acceptable in films with a 12 or 12A rating are now more likely to be rated 15 under updated guidelines.//
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Right or wrong? It won't stop films being available to all on television but it will help responsible parents decide what is suitable for their children to watch and what is not. Not before time in my opinion.
No best answer has yet been selected by naomi24. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.and yet, when the BBFC raised the rating on mary poppins a few weeks ago because of discriminatory language people on here were in apoplexy. In fact you yourself said "The more I read of this abject nonsense the more I'm convinced that some people are just programmed to eradicate all the joy from life."
so what's the difference here? are we a nation of nannys or not. Or is it just the mary whitehouse effect of no sex please we're british, but hey, we don't care about discriminatory language?
we either want the BBFC to warn us appropriately or not
bednobs, The difference is that with the relentless march towards 'educating' our chlldren about things they are too young to understand the liberals are depriving them of their innocence and have been doing it for a long time. The word 'Hottentot' doesn't do that - in fact most people watching Mary Poppins wouldn't even notice it - and yet our children are no longer allowed to hear it. Barmy.
They seem to be making the same mistake here as they seem determined to do with global warming/pollution.
There are plenty of views on the Internet enabling you to see sex & violence if your parents don't give a darn about you getting access; but what is chosen to be tackled ? Films at the cinema, which must be the least of parents' sex & violence issues with their kids.
Authorities really must learn to become realistic. But I doubt they ever will.
sorry i don't buy it.
a difference that makes no difference is no difference IMO. The BBFC are there to help people decide what films it's appropriate for people to see at what age. The move from u to PG for MP (and the other film talked about in that thread) does just that - lets parents know they might want to talk to their children about how saying N***** and other words that generally might cause offence either to certain groups or people is not a great thing
the move from 12 a to 15 lets parents know they might want to talk to their children about not replicating in real life the sex and nudity they see on screen as it's not a great thing
I'm sick to death of moralistic morons dictating what anyone can watch. Last week on ITV for example, there was another repeat of Golden Eye, but at least 2 parts of it had been edited out. One on the yacht Manticore, where Onatopp has a romp with the admiral and squezees the life out of him with her thighs.
Then, in a later scene, Bond is swimming alone in a pool, gets out, and there is Onatopp and he asks her for a meeting with Janus. Cut to the meeting with Janus, but the unedited version shows Bond having a physical encounter with Onatopp where she is trying to squeeze the life out of him, he gets the better of her and forces her to give him a location. That was edited out to protect all you shy, vulnerable, impressionable little darlings.
Anyway, when this on-line protection bill becomes law, I would guess it won't take long before the tech savvy kids negotiate their way round it. When my friends' son was 13, he was the main "go-to" at school for all computer repairs. He now has a top job with a tech firm, but I'm guessing there are plenty of kids out there who have the same ability with computers that he had/has.
So, who censors the censors?
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