Film censorship in Malaysia

Film censorship in imposed in Malaysia and the Film Censorship Board of Malaysia is the government ministry that vets films. It is under the control of the Home Ministry.

The two main cinema operators in Malaysia, Golden Screen Cinemas and Tanjung Golden Village, are known to be strict in ensuring that only patrons aged 18 and above are allowed to view films rated 18. Although movies shown in Malaysian cinemas carry an age-restricted rating such as 18, all the sex and nudity in such films are heavily censored by the LPF (Malaysia's film censorship board), which renders the 18 rating meaningless and strict entry by the cinema operators pointless. On the other hand, there have been many 18 rated films filled with profanity and violence that were hardly censored or uncensored in recent years. This shows that the board mostly views sex and nudity as completely unacceptable for a Malaysian audience.

Censorship guidelines for films were loosened in March 2010, the first revision since 1994, allowing movies with some violence and profanity to be screened in local cinemas, some without cuts, such as Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb, Zookeeper, Life of Pi and We Bought a Zoo. Minimal cuts are applied to some films; such cases can be seen in movies such as Divergent, The Host, The Mortal Instruments: City of Bones, The Maze Runner and The Fault In Our Stars. Blu-ray releases of films with uncensored scenes are not sold in Malaysia.

Rating system

The rating system for movies shown in Malaysian cinemas was introduced in 1996 and the classification system for approved films is as follows:

This has since been simplified to a mere 18, which makes no distinction on what type of objectionable content is contained within the movie.

Films with an 18 rating require an accompanying adult for those who are underage, although cinemas may refuse sale/deny admission as they see fit/needed.

Banned films

The Malaysian Censorship Board on 4 March 2007 decided to ban Tsai Ming-liang's film, I Don't Want to Sleep Alone, based on 18 counts of incidents shown in the film depicting the country "in a bad light" for cultural, ethical, and racial reasons. However, they later allowed the film to be screened in the country after Tsai agreed to censor parts of the film according to the requirements of the Censorship Board.[1]

References

  1. "Cutting for change", TheStar Online, May 14, 2007.

External links