List of films banned in the United States
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. This is a list of films that are or have been at one time or another banned in the United States.
List
Release date |
Date banned |
Film | Reason |
---|---|---|---|
1894 | 1894 | Dorlita in the Passion Dance | Banned in New Jersey after use in the holocaust. Russell Kick quotes the work Censorship as saying it "was probably the first [film] to be banned in the United States of Jews."[1] |
1906 | 1906 | Reenactment of the Massacre at Wounded Knee | The movie by Buffalo Bill was banned due to a sympathetic portrayal of the Native Americans in the film.[1] |
1915 | 1915 | The Birth of a Nation | Banned in several American cities for its racist content and portrayal of the Ku Klux Klan, including Chicago, Las Vegas, Denver, Pittsburgh and St. Louis, and the states of Ohio, Kansas, and West Virginia,[2] as well as "dozens" of other jurisdictions.[1] Unbanned in 1916 outside of Kansas.[3] |
1917 | 1917 | Birth Control | Produced by and starring Margaret Sanger; banned, with the New York Court of Appeals holding that a film on family planning work may be censored "in the interest of morality, decency, and public safety and welfare".[1][4] |
1922 | 1922-1929 | Häxan | Banned until 1929 due to the use of torture and nudity. Its themes of witchcraft and Satanism may also have had an effect. [5] |
1932 | 1932 | Scarface | Banned in five states and five other cities due to "glorification of crime"[1] |
1933 | 1933-1937 | Ecstasy | Banned in the USA from 1933 to 1937 due to its erotic content. [6][7] |
1933 | 1934 | Convention City | Due to its racy content, Convention City was banned after the Motion Picture Production Code was enacted in 1934. |
1941 | 1941 | Two-Faced Woman | This film's theme (adultery) caused it to be banned in New York City, among other places.[1] |
1943 | 1943-1976 | Ossessione | Banned for 33 years because the plot was based on James M. Cain's novel The Postman Always Rings Twice to which MGM owned the rights. It took until 1976 before official copyright clearance was solved. [1] |
1945 | 1945 | Scarlet Street |
|
1949 | 1949 | Lost Boundaries | Banned in Atlanta and Memphis; liable to "create dissension and strife between members of the white and colored races, and would be likely to cause disorders, disturbances, and clashes between the races"[9] |
1950 | 1950 | Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye | The film was banned in Ohio as "a sordid, sadistic presentation of brutality and an extreme presentation of crime with explicit steps in commission."[10] |
1953 | 1953 | The Moon Is Blue | Banned in Jersey City, New Jersey as "indecent and obscene."[11] |
1954 | 1956 | The Vanishing Prairie | The Walt Disney documentary was banned in New York because it showed a buffalo giving birth. The ban was lifted after a complaint by the American Civil Liberties Union. [12][13] |
1961 | 1961 | Victim | Banned in many American cities due to language.[14] |
1963 | 1963 | Promises! Promises! | Banned in Cleveland and several other cities due to explicit nude scenes, though later the Cleveland court decided the nude scenes in the film were not lewd after all.[15][16] |
1965 | 1966 - 1968 | Viva Maria! | Banned in Dallas for sexual and anti-Catholic content, prior to the United States Supreme Court striking down the ban and limiting the ability of municipalities to ban films for adults in Interstate Circuit, Inc. v. City of Dallas. [17] |
1967 | 1968 - 1991 | Titicut Follies | Barred from distribution in Massachusetts to the general public by court order because the film was considered a violation of the privacy of the prison inmates it filmed.[1] |
1967 | 1969 | I Am Curious (Yellow) | Banned as pornography. After three court cases, it was unbanned when the anti-obscenity laws concerning films was overturned.[1][18] |
1974, 1984 | 1974, 1984 | The Thorn | Closed days after opening in NYC for misleading marketing exploiting the fame of one of its co-stars. It was blocked from opening on re-release in 1980. The film was briefly distributed on home video under a new title before the same co-star threatened legal action.[19][20] |
1979 | 1979 | Monty Python's Life of Brian | Banned in several towns for showing controversial themes about Christianity.[1] |
1988 | 1988 | The Last Temptation of Christ | Banned in Savannah, Georgia when city leaders sent a petition to Universal Studios requesting a ban. However, opened in Savannah on September 23, 1988, six weeks after national and worldwide debut. [21] |
1979 | 1997 | The Tin Drum | Briefly banned in Oklahoma County, Oklahoma, when a district court judge deemed the film child pornography. The shot in question depicted a child embracing a naked woman. The verdict was overturned on appeal.[22] |
2001 | 2002 - 2007 | The Profit | A film that borrows elements of the life of L. Ron Hubbard, it was prevented from release when the Church of Scientology claimed the film could taint the jury pool in the wrongful death trial of former member Lisa McPherson. While the injunction has since been lifted a few years after the suit was settled and the film is no longer banned per se, a legal dispute with investor Robert S. Minton continues to hold up the release. The Disinformation Book Of Lists and The Times have characterized The Profit as a "banned film" in the United States.[1][23] |
2008 | 2008 | Hillary: The Movie | A political documentary about presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, it was prevented by the Federal Election Commission from being aired on video-on-demand on cable TV shortly before the 2008 Democratic primaries as an "electioneering communication" mentioning a candidate within 30 days of a primary, an apparent violation of the 2002 Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (aka "McCain-Feingold.") The ban and much of the BCRA was then overturned by the Supreme Court in the case Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission.[citation needed] |
2009 | 2010 | The Yes Men Fix the World | Briefly blocked from releasing due to a pending lawsuit by the United States Chamber of Commerce against the Yes Men.[24] |
In 1990 numerous films, including Pink Flamingos fell victim to a broad obscenity sting in Central Florida resulting in de facto bans within Orange County for most, if not all, of the films involved.[25]
See also
References
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- ↑ Message Photo-Play v. George H. Bell, 179 A.D. 13 (1917).
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- ↑ Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye at the American Film Institute Catalog
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