Pride and Prejudice: U
Napoleon Dynamite: PG
A Walk To Remember: PG
Perks of Being a Wallflower: PG13/12A
Ferris Bueller's Day Off: PG 13/15
Now is Good: 12A
Bend It Like Beckham: 12A
Juno:12A
An Education: 12A
The Bucket List: 12A
500 Days Of Summer: 12A
Albatross:15
Fish Tank:15
Submarine: 15
Little Miss Sunshine: 15
Youth in Revolt: 15
The Class:15
The Notebook: 15
Neds:15
Adventureland: 15
Almost Famous:15
Billy Elliot: 15
The Breakfast Club: 15
Amelie: 15
Election:15
Risky Business: 18
DIFFERENCES BETWEEN 12As AND 15s:
Rating
|
12A - The BBFC considers the
content of 12A rated films to be suitable for children aged 12 and over |
15 - No-one under 15 is allowed to
see a 15 film at the cinema or buy/rent a ‘15’ rated DVD |
Sex
|
Sex may
be briefly and discreetly portrayed
Verbal
sex references should not go beyond what is suitable for young teenagers, but
comedy may lessen the impact of some moderate sex references or innuendo
Sexual
violence, such as scenes of rape or assault, may only be implied or briefly
and discreetly indicated at 12A. Such scenes must also have a strong
contextual justification
|
Sexual activity can be portrayed, as long as there is no
strong or graphic detail
These scenes may be quite long at this category and may
involve some nudity and movement
No constraints on nudity in a non-sexual or educational
context
Strong references to sex and sexual behaviour
Can have detailed verbal references to sexual violence but any
portrayal of sexual violence must be discreet and have a strong contextual
justification
|
Violence
|
Moderate
violence is allowed but it should not dwell on detail, with no emphasis on
injuries or blood
Weapons
which might be easily accessible to 12 year olds should not be glamorised
|
Violence may be strong
Should not dwell on the infliction of pain or injury
Easily accessible weapons may not be glamorised
|
Strong Language
|
There
may be infrequent strong language (eg 'f***')
There
may be moderate language (eg uses of terms such as ‘bitch’ and ‘twat’)
|
There is no upper limit on the number of uses of strong
language (eg f***)
No continued or aggressive usage of the strongest terms (eg
'c***')
|
Drug use
|
There may be infrequent sight of drugs misuse |
Drug taking may be shown but the work as a whole must not
promote or encourage drug misuse
But don’t tend to allow the misuse of easily accessible and
highly dangerous substances like aerosols or solvents
|
Overall Tone
|
A film with a more positive or reassuring tone instead of very dark
or unsettling tone which could disturb the audience would be more likely to
gain a 12a certificate |
|
Additional Points
|
Unlikely to have aggressive discriminatory language, and it must not
be endorsed by the film as a whole
Dangerous behaviour (for example hanging, suicide and self-harming)
may be present in 12 or 12A works but will not dwell on detail which could be
copied or present those activities as pain or harm free
|
May be racist, homophobic or other discriminatory language,
and the work could explore themes relating to this, but must not endorse it
Can be strong threat and menace
Dangerous behaviour such as hanging, suicide and self-harming
should not dwell on detail which could be copied
|
We think that our film should have a 12A rating, as it may moderately reference and protray sex, drug usage, along with featuring some strong language.
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