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BBFC Refuses Classification To The Bunny Game

Only days after the BBFC reversed their original decision and passed THE HUMAN CENTIPEDE II (FULL SEQUENCE) with an 18 certificate (albeit with over two minutes of cuts), it seems they have rejected another film, this time Adam Rehmeier’s THE BUNNY GAME. If the BBFC stick to their decision, this will be only the second film since 1993 to have been refused a UK certificate.

The news was announced yesterday, sue to fears that the film may work to eroticise the sexual violence. However, director Rehmeier has been quoted as saying, ‘I didn’t make THE BUNNY GAME to glamorise prostitution. It is far from an erotic film. It is a modern cautionary tale grounded in reality.’ The film tells the story a prostitute who is kidnapped and abused by a trucker.

Trinity X, the film’s UK distributor, is apparently considering its options. It’s entirely conceivable that they could wage a successful campaign to overturn the decision. Even though the BBFC has stated that the ‘pervasiveness of the abuse’ would make even a cut version of the film problematic, a similar thing was said about THE HUMAN CENTIPEDE II.

Read the BBFC’s press release below.

Source: BBFC

The British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) has rejected the sexually violent DVD The Bunny Game. The film follows a female prostitute who hitches a lift with a truck driver. The truck driver kidnaps the woman, restrains and forcibly strips her, and proceeds to physically and sexually abuse and humiliate her. The abuse of the kidnapped woman takes up the greater part of the film.

The Board’s Guidelines state “A strict policy on sexual violence and rape is applied. Content which might eroticise or endorse sexual violence may require cuts at any classification level. This is more likely with video works than film because of the potential for replaying scenes out of context. Any association of sex with non-consensual restraint, pain or humiliation may be cut”.  The principal focus of The Bunny Game is the unremitting sexual and physical abuse of a helpless woman, as well as the sadistic and sexual pleasure the man derives from this. The emphasis on the woman’s nudity tends to eroticise what is shown, while aspects of the work such as the lack of explanation of the events depicted, and the stylistic treatment, may encourage some viewers to enjoy and share in the man’s callousness and the pleasure he takes in the woman’s pain and humiliation.

David Cooke, Director of the BBFC said: “It is the Board’s carefully considered view that to issue a certificate to this work, even if confined to adults, would be inconsistent with the Board’s Guidelines, would risk potential harm within the terms of the Video Recordings Act, and would accordingly be unacceptable to the public.”

The Board considered whether its concerns could be dealt with through cuts.  However, the pervasiveness of the abuse makes it very difficult to deal with The Bunny Game by means of cuts.  If the company would like to attempt to cut this work in order to submit it in a reduced form, they are entitled to do so, but the Board can offer no assurances that such re-editing would be successful.

The decision to reject The Bunny Game was taken by the Director, David Cooke and the Presidential Team of Sir Quentin Thomas, Alison Hastings and Gerard Lemos. The decision means that the film cannot be legally supplied anywhere in the UK.

Tom Fordy is a writer and journalist. Originally from Bristol, he now lives in London. He is a former editor of The Hollywood News and Loaded magazine. He also contributes regularly to The Telegraph, Esquire Weekly and numerous others. Follow him @thetomfordy.

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