This is a non-exhaustive list of films that have been or are banned in Canada.
Release Date | Film | Notes |
---|---|---|
1910 | Romeo and Juliet | Banned in Ontario.[1][2] |
1916 | Damaged Goods | Banned in Ontario.[1] |
1931 | Little Caesar | Banned in Alberta, British Columbia, and Nova Scotia.[3] |
1937 | The Life of Emile Zola | Banned in Quebec.[4] Available in Quebec since 1997 with a "G" rating.[5] |
1939 | Thugs with Dirty Mugs | Banned in Winnipeg, Manitoba, because censors "felt the film was just an excuse to show criminal activity."[6] Available in Winnipeg on DVD as part of the Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 3. |
1946 | Scarlet Street | Banned in New Brunswick.[1] |
1946 | Wicked Lady | Banned in New Brunswick.[1] |
1947 | Forever Amber | Banned in Quebec.[1] Available in Quebec since 1994 with a "G" rating.[7] |
1953 | The Wild One | Alberta, British Columbia, and Quebec banned the film.[8] Available in Quebec from 1968 to 2013 with a "14+" rating and since 2013 with a "G" rating.[9] |
1956 | Baby Doll | Originally banned in Alberta in 1957.[10] |
1960 | Elmer Gantry | United Artists withdrew the film from release in the Ontario province on August 4, 1960, after star Burt Lancaster objected to Ontario censor O.J. Silverthorne's removal of a racy line of dialogue.[11] The ban on the film lasted only a week;[12] the cut version began showing at the Carlton theater in Toronto with a Restricted rating on August 18, though it only was a modest box office success in the city.[13] The uncut version is available on DVD with a G rating under the Canadian Home Video Rating System. |
1963 | Tom Jones | Alberta banned the film. After two years, the decision was reversed and it was allowed to be shown.[14] |
1967 | Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? | Nova Scotia censors banned the film, describing it as "obscene and blasphemous". After an appeal from the distributor and media coverage, the decision was later reversed and the film was released with a "Restricted" rating[14][15] |
1967 | Warrendale | Manitoba banned the film due to the language. However, due to public outcry, the decision was reversed.[14] |
1970 | On est au coton | The National Film Board of Canada blocks the release of Denys Arcand's controversial documentary. An edited version is released in 1976, but the original unedited version was not released until 2004.[16][17] |
1970 | Women in Love | The Alberta censors banned the film due to nudity.[18] |
1971 | A Clockwork Orange | Alberta and Nova Scotia banned the film.[1] Alberta reversed the ban in 1999. The Maritime Film Classification Board has also reversed the ban.[19] Both jurisdictions now grant an R rating to the film. |
1972 | Pink Flamingos | Edited in several provinces, with Nova Scotia banning it outright until 1997.[19] |
1973 | Heavy Traffic | Banned in Alberta. |
1974 | The Texas Chain Saw Massacre | Banned in Alberta in 1975.[20] |
1976 | Blood Sucking Freaks | Banned in Ontario when classified for a videocassette release.[21] |
1976 | In the Realm of the Senses | Banned in Ontario because the censors deemed it contained "degradation, explicit and prolonged scenes of sexual activity, undue emphasis on human genitals, and its representation of a person under 16 in sexual context".[22] |
1978 | Pretty Baby | Banned in Ontario and Saskatchewan on the basis of scenes in which star Brooke Shields, then aged thirteen, was photographed in the nude.[23]: 39 The ban was repealed in 1995.[24] |
1978–1996 | Faces of Death | Series of mondo films banned in Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia.[25] |
1979 | Beneath the Valley of the Ultra-Vixens | Banned in Nova Scotia.[19] |
1980 | Caligula | Banned by all provinces except British Columbia, which received a Restricted rating with a warning. Edited versions were later passed.[citation needed] The 156-minute "unrated" version was passed in British Columbia by the BC Film Classification Office. The uncut version was banned again in Ontario in 2000 for a theatrical reissue due to "sexual violence" "bestality" and "incest".[26] It has subsequently been reevaluated and approved with an R rating in the Maritimes[19] and in Ontario. |
1980 | The Tin Drum | Edited, and later banned outright as child pornography by the Ontario Film Classification Board.[27] |
1981 | Not a Love Story | The feminist documentary critique of the pornography industry was itself banned in Ontario for its pornographic content, although that decision was ultimately reversed.[28] |
1981 | Beau-père | French film about a man having sex with a minor was banned in Ontario.[29] |
1981 | The Best of sex and violence | Banned in Ontario in 1986.[30] |
1983 | I Spit on Your Grave | Banned in Nova Scotia until 1998.[19] |
1984 | The Toxic Avenger | Ontario censors banned the film after only watching the first 40 minutes due to "graphic and prolonged scenes of gratuitous violence, torture, crime, cruelty, horror, rape, degradation to humans and animals and exploitation of the blind and children, as well as indignities to the human body in an explicit manner".[31] A softer version missing a lot of the gore was passed with a restricted rating after several cuts were made.[32] |
1984 | Silent Night, Deadly Night | Banned in Ontario in 1987.[33] |
1985 | Day of the Dead | Banned in Ontario and the Maritimes, with a cut, 97 minute version passed in Ontario.[34] The original 101 minute version was resubmitted to the Ontario Film Review Board in 1998 and given a R rating when released on VHS. In 2008 the rating was changed to 14A.[35] The 101-minute version has also been granted an R rating in the Maritimes.[19] |
1986 | Killer Party | Banned in Ontario.[36] |
1986 | Blue Velvet | A David Lynch film that was banned by the New Brunswick Film Classification Board due to its prevalence of sexually explicit scenes and of heavily violent scenes.[37] New Brunswick now uses the ratings provided by the Maritime Film Classification Board, which granted an R rating.[19] |
1987 | Hellraiser | Initially banned in Ontario because of "Brutal, graphic violence with blood-letting through, horror, degradation, and torture." Passed with a Restricted rating after New World Mutual agreed to cut 40 seconds of violence.[38] |
1989–1993 | Death Scenes | Video series is banned in Nova Scotia.[19] |
1992 | Dead Alive | U.S. unrated version banned in Ontario, however the heavily cut U.S. R-rated version was approved with a Restricted rating.[39] |
1992 | Tokyo Decadence | Briefly banned in Ontario in early 1994. The distributor appealed and the censor allowed the film to play only in "select venues".[40] |
1994 | Exit to Eden | Temporarily banned by the Saskatchewan Film and Video Classification Board.[41][42] The controversy surrounding the ban and the film itself ultimately led to Saskatchewan disbanding its classification authority, handing classification of films over to the British Columbia Film Classification Office in a 1997 bilateral agreement.[43] |
2000 | Baise-moi | Banned in Ontario in 2000.[44] The ban was lifted in 2001 with the film being passed with a 'Restricted' rating after 13 seconds were removed.[45][46] |
2001 | Fat Girl | Banned in Ontario in 2001 because the censor board deemed the film depicted underage sex.[47] The ban was lifted in 2003 with the film being passed with an "R" rating.[48] |
2003 | Steve-O: Out on Bail | Banned in Ontario because of two scenes of explicit defecation that were deemed to have no artistic merit.[49] |
2006 | Bumfights | This series of shot-on-tape reality productions, is banned in seven of the thirteen provinces and territories; the remaining give it an R rating. [citation needed] As of 2016, the films are still banned in Quebec.[50] |
On October 1, 1997, an agreement between the province of British Columbia and Saskatchewan came into effect, under which the British Columbia Film Classification Office will classify all new theatrical releases and adult videos on behalf of the Saskatchewan Film and Video Classification Board.
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