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The Australian Government Classification Website Includes info about classification system, board member profiles and a public searchable database of classification decisions; The R 18+ Discussion Paper Submissions due 28 February 2010. Inside Film Magazine's Phillip Cenere reports on the ACB International Ratings Conference
The Australian Classification Review Board is a statutory censorship and classification body overseen by the Australian Government. The corporate body is responsible for reviewing classification decisions made by the Australian Classification Board concerning films , video games and publications for exhibition, sale or hire in Australia .
Media in category "Australian classification system" The following 4 files are in this category, out of 4 total. OFCL Australia Lit Rating - R1.png 150 × 71; 2 KB
The Australian premiere for the film was held at Sydney's Dendy Newtown cinema on 16 April 2013. A DVD release was banned by the Classification Board in 2014 and then passed with an R18+ classification a few months later after two minutes of cuts were made by the distributor. [41] Allowed after two minutes cut, classified R18+ [41] 2014
Introduced in 2013, the IARC system simplifies the process of obtaining ratings by developers, through the use of questionnaires, which assess the content of the product. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] This new process reduces the costs of video game developers as they seek to obtain ratings for their products that are distributed digitally online.
Banned through the IARC System because of sexual violence and drug use related to incentives and rewards. [31] [21] Developers Devolver Digital then appealed the rating through the Australian Classification board via a manual review and the game once again given the Refused Classification Rating for the same reason it was initially rejected. [32]
You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work; to remix – to adapt the work; Under the following conditions: attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made.
Many R 18+ movies on DVD/Blu-ray are often edited on Free TV/cable networks, to secure an MA 15+ classification or lower. Some movies that were classified R 18+ on DVD have since been aired on Australian TV with an MA 15+ classification. Pay television networks also have a different system [11] to the free-to-air networks. In general, all ...