By Dave BellPosted Thursday 3rd April 2008 15:01 GMT
I reckon the BBFC do a good job, but every so often things get messy. Either some politician starts leaning on them, or, as affected <i>Enter the Dragon</i> for many years, somebody in the BBFC enforces some rather too arbitrary a rule.
On the whole, I'd rather have the BBFC expanded, taking advantage of their experience, but I don't trust the politicians to safeguard us against somebody's personal hang-ups about rice flails.
"The classifications will be voluntary because the Video Recordings Act doesn’t require downloaded content to carry legally binding BBFC classifications."
Of course it has to be voluntary. How can they 'enforce' it?
Paris because I think even she could see the stupidity of this kind of announcement
By Anonymous CowardPosted Thursday 3rd April 2008 15:24 GMT
How the hell do they expect to make this work? As it is, classification only works (up to a point) when age can be physically verified (cinema's, rental stores... the local supermarket on DVD release day). After that the current (flawed) system goes to pot... Parents LET their 'kids' watch films that are 'unsuitable' for their age. I dare say that most of the time it is the parents buying the films for the kids too. Do the BBFC really think most parents really give a flying fig if their 16 year old son is watching a 18 cert film?
Also, whats stopping little Johny Smith (14) from 'borrowing' his dads credit card and renting/purchasing a downloadable movie with an 18 Cert?
MORE emphasis (than what is already in place) should be placed upon the actual content of a film... It should then be up to the parents to make an informed decision about whether they think a film is suitable for their 'child' or not... even then, that would never be fool proof.
Seems like the BBFC are just trying to justify their worthless existance really as EVERYBODY knows that film classifications DON'T WORK. Come the release of Rambo 4 (or whatever number it is now!) every schoolboy in the country will be watching it after borrowing the DVD from their elder brother or something.
Paris because she knows all about films with content not suitable for children!
By Anonymous CowardPosted Thursday 3rd April 2008 21:32 GMT
There's something I find deeply worrying and insipid about people who want to protect me. I don't mean the Armed Forces or the Health Service or even some designer who packs a new car with airbags. I'm talking about the people like the BBFC who, despite us all being grown adults, are determined to protect us under the South Park guise of "...why won't someone think of the children!!!"
I don't believe young kids should be watching slasher flicks but when you get into the difference between 12 and 18 rated stuff, chances are the 12 year old will go to a mates house and watch said slasher flick because the mate's brother or something has it. This is the way REAL LIFE works, regardless of the intentions of some very well meaning but ultimately interfering censors.
U - Universal Downloads; 15 - Lasts for 15 days before DRM kicks in; PG - Pretty Ghastly, unsuitable for Adults; 18 - Probably worth burning to disk; X - anything from UTube etc; XX - anything with heterosexual congress in it; XXX - threesomes; XXXX - contains prolonged and graphic representations of beer drinking
Comments on: Coming soon: classifications for movie downloads
Mixed feelings. #
By Dave Bell Posted Thursday 3rd April 2008 15:01 GMT
Oh shucks - no more torrent movies #
By Paul Posted Thursday 3rd April 2008 15:21 GMT
One for the stupid idea's #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 3rd April 2008 15:24 GMT
Redundant #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 3rd April 2008 15:25 GMT
And the 1%? #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 3rd April 2008 16:57 GMT
And while you're downloading a G rated movie for your kids... #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 3rd April 2008 17:54 GMT
BBFC at it again.... #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Thursday 3rd April 2008 21:32 GMT
Suggestions for Classifications #
By Slaine Posted Friday 4th April 2008 10:58 GMT