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History of British Film Certificates

The UK's film ratings are decided by the British Board of Film Classification and have been since 1913 (previously there were no ratings). For cinema releases, the BBFC has no legal power (technically, the film studios do not even have to submit their films for classification), as it falls to the local councils to decide who should be admitted to a certain film. However, the councils nearly always abide by the BBFC's certificates, effectively making them legally-binding. They have also followed the BBFC's recent advice and added legal backing to the new 12A certificate, meaning that children under 12 can be admitted as long as they are accompanied by an adult. In the case of videos, the BBFC have had legal powers since 1985 (previously there were no video ratings) and are obliged to rate every new video release (the ratings themselves determining the age a person needs to be to buy and rent a video).

The following list chronicals the BBFC's ratings system from its inception to the present. Note that what is allowed in a film has greatly changed over time. A film rated A in 1913 would probably be rated U now.

In each section, empthasis indicates when a certificate has changed since the previous system.

Table of contents
1 1913-1932
2 1932-1951
3 1951-1970
4 1970-1982
5 1982-1985
6 1985-1989
7 1989-1994
8 1994-2002
9 2002-
10 See Also
11 External Link

1913-1932

1932-1951

1951-1970

1970-1982

1982-1985

1985-1989

1989-1994

1994-2002

2002-

See Also

External Link