R18 certificate

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R18 category symbol

The R18 certificate represents a film or video classification given by the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC). It is intended to provide a classification for works that are within British obscenity laws, but exceed what the BBFC considers acceptable for its 18 certificate. In practice, this means hardcore pornography.

Under the terms of the 1984 Video Recordings Act all videos sold or distributed within the UK must either be given a certificate by the BBFC, or ruled exempt by them. Uncertificated recordings are not illegal, regardless of content (except where the content is actually illegal itself), but supply (i.e. sale, rental, loan or gift) of them is. The R18 certificate is the most restrictive of the certificates, and videos given this certificate may only be shown in licensed cinemas,[1] or sold direct to the buyer in person in licensed sex shops, and not by mail order or other remote means such as by telephone or over the Internet.[2] According to the BBFC there are currently around 250 such licensed shops.[3]

Since the boundary of British obscenity law is vague, the BBFC deliberately errs on the side of caution[citation needed]. It specifies in detail what kinds of acts are permitted to be depicted in works receiving an R18 certificate, and which are not. In particular, it prohibits the depiction of acts which are illegal, degrading, violent or non-consensual. However, apart from these restrictions, it allows the depiction of most sex acts, including vaginal sexual intercourse, oral sex, masturbation, and anal sex, between any combination of men and women. It also has recently allowed the depiction of visibly consensual sexual bondage and very mild BDSM activities.

There has been some controversy about the prohibition of the depiction of female ejaculation, which the BBFC considers to be the same as urination during sex, the depiction of which it regards as "degrading or dehumanising". As of 2005, the BBFC still appears to regard the depiction of urination on oneself or others, "urination accompanied by sexual activity", or "immediately before/after", sexual activity, or with licking of urine, as prohibited by the Obscene Publications Act 1959. Nevertheless, the BBFC appears to have R18-rated a number of videos based on the theme of urination (presumably without any of the acts referred to above).

As of 2004, the broadcasting of R18 material is prohibited, even on encrypted digital channels.

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[edit] History of the R18 certificate

The R18 classification was created in 1982 in response to the recommendatations in 1979 of the Home Office Committee on Obscenity and Film Censorship chaired by Sir Bernard Williams. Originally it was only used for films featuring simulated sex only, but the BBFC found itself forced to award R18 certificates to hardcore films in 2000 after a series of legal appeals and a judicial review of those appeals.

The introduction of the R18 certificate for hardcore films is widely seen by observers as a reaction to more liberal attitudes in British society to pornography, the de facto legalisation of the import of hardcore pornography (but not its sale) across the EU because of customs law harmonisation, and the widespread availability of unregulated pornography over the Internet.

[edit] Recent developments

The BBFC has previously granted 18 certificates for movies containing short scenes of unsimulated sex, such as Catherine Breillat's Romance (in 1999), Virginie Despentes's Baise Moi (in 2000) and Patrice Chereau's Intimacy (in 2001).

As of 2004, a review is in progress of the classification and regulation system, and the BBFC is currently being challenged by video distributors to award 18 certificates to material which currently falls under the R18 guidelines. If this succeeds, the R18 classification may cease to have any distinction from the 18 certificate.

In October 2004, the BBFC granted an 18 certificate for Michael Winterbottom's movie 9 Songs, which features a number of explicit scenes of unsimulated sex. It is unclear whether this marks the end of the R18 certificate, or whether the BBFC will apply an "artistic merit" test to distinguish between films which are acceptable for 18 certificates and those which receive only R18 certificates. However, the DVD extras for this film were given an R18 certificate.

A press release from the BBFC on 20 July 2005 indicated that the VAC appeal had been won by them. The R18 certificate is thus here to stay for the time being.

As of 2006, the BBFC rated the film Destricted an 18 certificate on the understanding that all copies include a warning that it contains real sex has been seen by some to be liberalisation of BBFC granting of 18 certificates as the film contains many unsimulated sex scenes.

[edit] References

  1. ^ bbfc - the official website of the bbfc. classification for entertainment, movies and video games
  2. ^ [1] Hansard, paragraph 25: "'R18' video works can only be sold to adults who visit a licensed sex shop and must not be supplied by mail order."
  3. ^ Knowing it when you see it:

[edit] External links