List of films banned in Singapore

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This is a list of films banned in Singapore. This list includes films banned for screening in the country due to issues of virtue, either by law or by the Board of Film Censors (BFC). It also includes films that were previously banned but were eventually unbanned.

List

DateFilmNotes
1971–2011 A Clockwork Orange Banned for over 30 years, before an attempt at release was made in 2006. However, the submission for a M18 rating was rejected, and the ban was not lifted. [1] The ban was later lifted, with film was shown uncut with an R21 rating on 28 October 2011, as part of the Perspectives Film Festival. [2] [3]
1973 The Exorcist Banned upon initial release, and subsequently rated M18 with cuts made to "a scene of a disfigured statue of the Virgin Mary, and a scene of possessed Regan MacNeil stabbing herself in the crotch with a crucifix while uttering “Jesus f**k you!”...[for] “films that denigrate any religious group” and “language that denigrates religion or is religiously profane”". [1] [4]
1973 Last Tango in Paris Banned for its strong sexual content. [1]
1974–2004 The Texas Chain Saw Massacre Banned for 30 years. [1] Passed uncut after 2004 with an M18 rating for violence. [5]
1975 Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom Banned due to graphic violence and nudity. [6]
1979 Monty Python's Life of Brian Banned for "inappropriate" religious content. [7] [8]
1980 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 The Evil Dead Banned since its release in 1981; authorities disallowed it for "excessive graphic violence and gore". Ban lifted in 2011 and reclassified R21. [12]
1986 The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 Banned by the authority. Subsequently, rated R21. [13]
1988 The Last Temptation of Christ Banned for blasphemous content. [14]
1989 Begotten Reportedly banned in Singapore, this experimental horror film depicts the allegorical death and rebirth of a God-like figure with graphic violence and sexual imagery throughout. [15]
2001–2004 Zoolander Banned without a reason given, though the plot is about a man who is brainwashed to assassinate the Prime Minister of Malaysia, a neighbouring country, which also banned the film. [16] Passed uncut after 2004 with an NC16 rating. [17]
2004 Formula 17 Banned because it "portrayed homosexuality as normal, a natural progression of society." [18]
2005–2009Singapore RebelBanned for being a political film, which is not allowed in Singapore. In 2009 the film was reviewed by the Political Films Consultative Committee (PFCC) and unbanned, with an M18 rating. [19]
2006 Shortbus Banned because of pornographic content. [6]
2007Following DesireBanned for "excessive sexual acts and stage performances of a sexual nature which are prolonged, gratuitous and exploitative". [20]
2007Zahari's 17 YearsBanned because, according to the Government of Singapore, it is "against public interests". [21]
2008 A Jihad for Love Banned for discussing the relationship between Islam & homosexuality and featuring homosexual Muslims discussing intolerance they’ve faced within their religious communities. [20]
2008David the TolhidanBanned for its "sympathetic portrayal of an organisation viewed as a terrorist organisation by many countries". [20]
2008Arabs and TerrorismBanned for its "sympathetic portrayal of an organisation viewed as a terrorist organisation by many countries". [20]
2008BakushiBanned for its "several prolonged and explicit sado-masochistic sequences, demonstrating how the rope masters tied up nude women and subjected them to various degrees of physical abuse and sexual degradation, for the erotic gratification of their audience". [20]
2009Female GamesBanned for its "explicit lesbian sex acts". [20]
2009 Boy Banned because it "romanticizes and promotes homosexual relationships. The sexual sequence is prolonged, intense and titillates". [20]
2009Brides of AllahBanned because it "promotes and justifies the act of terrorism, and uses religion to justify its cause". [20]
2009Transgressor (School of the Holy Beast)Banned because it "portrayed nuns as lesbians with depictions of sadomasochism as well as bondage in many of the scenes". [20]
2010Dr Lim Hock SiewBanned due to similar reasons for the film Zahari's 17 Years [22]
2012 Sex.Violence.FamilyValues Banned because of Porn Masala, the second story in Ken Kwek's compendium of three short films. It was deemed "racially offensive and demeaning to Indians" by the Board of Film Censors. [23] The ban was subsequently lifted and the film's Singapore version released with edits in March 2013. [24] However, the film had not completed its Singapore theatrical run when it was banned by the Malaysian Board of Film Censors, who found it "obscene" and "insulting to local cultures". [25] The film was also withdrawn from the ASEAN International Film Festival & Awards, where it was due to be screened from 28–30 Mar 2013. [26]
2013 Vishwaroopam For the depiction of the War on Terror, perceived as a negative portrayal of Muslims.
2014 To Singapore, With Love Banned because it allegedly undermined national security as "the individuals in the film have given distorted and untruthful accounts of how they came to leave Singapore and remain outside Singapore," and that "a number of these self-professed 'exiles' were members of, or had provided support to, the proscribed Communist Party of Malaya." [27]
2021 Benedetta Banned for "its portrayal of Jesus Christ and members of the church in a manner that is insensitive and offensive to the Christian and Catholic faith". [28]
2022 The Kashmir Files Banned "for its provocative and one-sided portrayal of Muslims and the depictions of Hindus being persecuted in the on-going conflict in Kashmir". [29]
2022 #LookAtMe Banned as it "contains content that denigrates a religious community and has the potential to cause enmity and social division in Singapore’s multi-racial and multi-religious society" [30] [31] [32]

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References

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