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All movies starring the Marx Brothers. Banned in Nazi Germany because the comedy stars were Jewish. [10] 1933–1945 Battleship Potemkin: Banned in Nazi Germany due to fears it could inspire Marxism. [11] [12] 1933–1945 Ecstasy: Banned in Nazi Germany because of the erotic content. [13] 1933–1945 Mädchen in Uniform
Article 118 of the Weimar constitution banned censorship, [12] but excepted film, indecent and obscene literature, and measures at public events to protect youth. Article 48 allowed the President to suspend this guarantee in order to restore public safety and order, with veto power over such actions given to the Reichstag.
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Over a billion cinema tickets were sold in 1943 alone in Germany. [7] After Germany’s surrender during the second world war, German citizens continued to flock to cinemas in large numbers; cinemas re opened even before Germany officially surrendered. [7] Before the official split of East and West Germany, Allied films were shown. As the rift ...
Banned due to its extremely violent content and actual on-screen killings of animals. [334] (also refused release in 2006) 1981–1988 Mad Max: Banned in 1979 because of a graphic violent death. [335] (VHS release was later approved at R18 [336]) 1986, 1995 Pink Flamingos: A home video VHS release with cuts made was rated R18 in 1985. [337]
Film censorship is the censorship of motion pictures, either through the excising of certain frames or scenes, or outright banning of films in their entirety. Film censorship typically occurs as a result of political or moral objections to a film's content; controversial content subject to censorship include the depiction of graphic violence, sexual situations, or racial themes.
Pages in category "Banned films in Nazi Germany" The following 40 pages are in this category, out of 40 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9.
The 79th Street Theater in Yorkville, Manhattan only showed films from Germany. [42] Casino Film Exchange was one of the largest American importers of German and Austrian films in the 1930s, operated a theatre in Yorkville, [ 43 ] and presented the films to German-Americans across the country.