This is an article I found on the target audience of 'This is England' and the stir it caused for being rated an 18 certificate which meant that it was unavailable to it's target audience.
An 18 for This is England ? This is an outrage
My new film has been landed with a certificate which will mean those who need to see it most will not be able to.
It's almost two years since we started shooting This is England and at last the film is nearly out, hitting cinemas here this weekend. I suppose it's my most personal film to date as the main character, Shaun Fields is loosely based upon me at a time in my childhood.
Shaun is a 12 year-old growing up in Thatcher's
Everything has been going brilliantly. Last autumn the film won the special jury prize at the Rome Film Festival and best film at the British Independent Film Awards (BIFAs), beating BAFTA winner The Queen. Thomas Turgoose, who plays Shaun, won the best newcomer award at the BIFAs too. We've had some amazing press and great reviews and everything was looking really positive.
Then, earlier this year, we heard that the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) had decided to give the film an 18 certificate for its use of "realistic violence and racist language". This means that the film is now unavailable to the audience it will benefit the most.
It's like I've somehow overachieved. By having one piece of violence and one piece of really acute verbal violence I've managed to get an 18 certificate, whereas someone else can slay thousands of people in a single film and that's OK. To be honest I don't understand it because, yes, the film is affecting but I think it's something that someone of 15 can cope with. It's not like it's a film about the 80s that has no value; it's incredibly relevant politically. It's as much about
The good news is that
As for me, I have a new deal with Warp Films, the production company behind This is
Well done Charlotte for posting this important comment (straight from the horse's mouth) onto your blog. This indicates that Field intended this film for a demographic of 15 year old boys and probably girls but censorship got in the way. And of course the film is as much about now as it is about 1983. As "Atonement" (though set in the 1930's and 40's) is about the deadly effect of social class, war and revenge. Thus the thems in both "Atonement" and "This is England" are timeless.
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