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Cannibal Holocaust was banned at various times in Australia, [47] Norway, Finland, Iceland, [48] New Zealand, [49] Singapore, [50] South Africa [51] and several other countries. The movie was briefly released in the US by Trans American Films in 1985, but this release was commercially doomed because Cannibal Holocaust was rated X by the Motion ...
Banned due to content that would be contrary to public decency and undesirable to public interest. [332] (VHS release was later approved at R16 [333]) 1980, 2006 Cannibal Holocaust: Banned due to its extremely violent content and actual on-screen killings of animals. [334] (also refused release in 2006) 1981–1988 Mad Max
Cannibal Holocaust: As well as being labelled as a 'Video Nasty', it was originally believed to be a snuff film. The director Ruggero Deodato was arrested for obscenity charges and was forced to prove that nobody had died during production. Despite finally being officially released in 2001, the film received 5 minutes and 44 seconds worth of cuts.
It is sometimes claimed that Cannibal Holocaust is still banned in over 50 countries worldwide, though this can only be verified for a handful of nations. In 2006, Cannibal Holocaust made Entertainment Weekly ' s Top 25 Most Controversial Movies of All-Time list, landing at number 20. [13]
Cannibal Holocaust: Banned due to its extremely violent content and actual on-screen killings of animals. [9] [10] 1980–2006 Saint Jack: Banned for the "excessive edits required to the scenes of nudity and some coarse language before it could be shown to a general audience," the film was reclassified to an M18 rating in 2006. [11] 1981–2011
After the American death metal band Cannibal Corpse released their debut album Eaten Back To Life in 1990, it was banned from being sold or displayed in Germany because of its graphic cover art ...
Cannibal Holocaust: 1980 Banned due to its extremely violent content and actual on-screen killings of animals. [4] 1988 The Last Temptation of Christ: 1988-permanent For its alleged anti-religion theme. [5] 1989 Dear Uncle Sam: N/A For its critical stance towards American military presence in the Philippines.
Telling my story makes me feel empowered because what was taken from us Jews and so many others was our very humanity.