Just using this as an all-purpose thread about UK censorship. I was glad to see this appear: the centrepiece of Channel 4's Censored weekend in 1999 was a
debate about the then-current boundaries of censorship on UK television (NSFW). This is the one where notoriously critic AA Gill calls Straw Dogs fine because "Susan George is a really bad actress", which was in no way the case. Straw Dogs remains an extremely powerful film and much more complex and important piece of work than any of the other films discussed, and was not particularly well handled by the commentators in that debate, but which (accidentally) proves the case that censorship and not allowing people to be able to see and judge a work for themselves allows for the 'gatekeepers' of a medium to portray and present it in whatever way they wish, from selectively edited clips with biased commentary; to coming at it from particular biases.
For some context about the films discussed and their history on UK television at the time:
[Violence]
- Natural Born Killers had notoriously skipped any video release and was shown on Channel 5 in the UK in November 1997 (only a few months into Channel 5 having began broadcasting), repeated again in 1999 and 2001. It has not been shown on UK television since this time, which is quite a shame since it may be Oliver Stone's best film and highly relevant to an age of media-saturated real crime sensationalisation, where the sociopathic killers are aided and abetted by a similarly bloodthirsty news media
- Straw Dogs was still unavailable at the time of the "Censored" debate, getting a DVD certificate in 2002 and had its first UK television screening on Channel 4 in August 2003, which has been its only UK television screening to date, over 22 years ago.
[Horror]
- The Exorcist famously was still suppressed by BBFC Director James Ferman specifically at the time of the debate, and once he retired was quickly given a theatrical and video re-release in the UK in 2000, and was just as quickly shown for the first time on UK television by Channel 4 in March 2001. Since that time and especialy in the last three or four years, it has become the most regularly shown film on UK television of this whole group, with the BBC showing it at least every year.
- The Texas Chain Saw Massacre was unavailable at the time of the debate but similarly to The Exorcist was quickly released after James Ferman's BBFC retirement. It received its first DVD release in 2000, as well as its first UK television screening on Channel 4 in October 2000, repeated in April 2003. That has been the last time the film has appeared on UK television, so it has been over 22 years since its last screening.
[Drugs]
On the complete other side of things we have discussions of both Pulp Fiction and Trainspotting, which had both aired on UK television before that 1999 debate. Pulp Fiction had appeared on BBC2 in November 1997 and would go on to appear multiple more times over the years. Trainspotting of course was literally a Channel 4 produced film, and had screened also in November 1997 (just 24 days after Pulp Fiction!) and would go on to become a staple of Channel 4 and Film4's schedules for decades.
[Sex]
- In The Realm of the Senses did screen on Film4 back when it was a paid subscription channel in 2000 (along with similar films that have never shown on Film4 again since it became a free to air station: Salo, Taxi Zum Klo, Seul Contre Tous and Romance) but has never shown on UK television beyond that. Even in that case it had to have a re-framed shot. Though it has since been released on Blu-ray in the 2010s.
- Emmanuelle - this had also received a premiere on Channel 5 before this Censored debate, in January 1998, repeated in 1999 and then shown on Channel 4 in 2001 (along with Alex Cox's "Emmanuelle: A Hard Look" documentary). The censor saying that: "the idea of this sort of film at all on terrestrial television only quite a short time ago would have been extraordinary" perhaps reflects Channel 5's impact when it began airing in 1997 with its remit of "Films, Football and F**king", airing a number of Russ Meyer films!
Ironically neither Emmanuelle itself or any Russ Meyer films have shown on UK television since the early 2000s, which perhaps suggests that the 'opening up' of censorship on UK television was in the process of shutting down again into bland homogeneity from around 2003-4 or so. But it is fascinating to look back on this debate, with its concerns about the internet back in 1999, from our current perspective as the UK makes its first concerted attempt to censor the online space. And for his dumb comment about Straw Dogs earlier on, AA Gill does make a good final point: "If you want to be remembered as an idiot by posterity, try to censor something"