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Australia: Howard government bans French movie Baise-moi
By Mile Klindo
18 May 2002
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In a serious attack on democratic rights, Australias
Classification Review Board last week banned the controversial
French film Baise-moi after Federal Attorney General Daryl
Williams called on the censorship body to review the films
R18+ (admission to over 18-year-olds) classification. The movie,
which was rated by the Office of Film and Literature last October,
began showings at selected art house cinemas on April 24 and was
seen by over 50,000 people before screenings were stopped. Many
of those who saw the film did so in order to demonstrate their
opposition to the anticipated ban.
Directed by Virginie Dispentes, who wrote the novel on which
Baise-moi was based, and Coralie Trin Thi, a porn actress,
the artistically limited but sexually explicit work attempts to
demonstrate how social relations brutalise women. It tells the
story of two sexually abused women, one of whom is gang-raped.
After a chance meeting, they travel across France picking up men
and women for sex and then murdering them.
Valhalla and Chauvel cinema managers in Sydney threatened to
continue showing the film last weekend until officially notified
of the ban. But they pulled it after New South Wales police visited
the theatres on May 12. Anyone screening a banned film in Australia
can be fined $11,000 and jailed for a year, with companies fined
up to $250,000.
According to press reports, Terry Breen, an executive member
of the NSW branch of the Australian Family Association (AFA),
a rightwing lobby group, contacted police in Surry Hills and Glebe,
where the two cinemas are located, and demanded they enforce the
Review Board decision.
The campaign to ban Baise-moi was initiated by a loose
coalition of extreme rightwing parliamentarians and Christian
fundamentalist groupings that have long demanded the Howard government
introduce stricter censorship guidelines.
Reverend Fred Nile, a NSW state Upper House MP and leader of
the Christian Democratic Party, began the push with a letter to
Attorney General Williams and Prime Minister John Howard on April
12, demanding they intervene to prevent the film being released.
Nile, who regularly denounces homosexuals as evil
and wants anyone satirising the church to be charged with blasphemy,
claimed that Baise-moi encouraged rape and murder. He was
backed by federal MPs, including South Australian Liberal MP Trish
Draper, National Party MP De-Anne Kelly and anti-abortionist Tasmanian
Senator Brian Harradine. In addition to contacting Howard and
Williams, they called on Deputy Prime Minister John Anderson to
stop the film, claiming it was undermining Christian values. None
of those demanding the ban had seen the film.
These moral crusaders are members of the Lyons Forum, a backroom
lobby group established in 1992 by Chris Miles and John Bradford.
The Lyons Forum wants all sexually explicit films and videos banned.
Miles is Howards former parliamentary secretary, while Bradford
is a member of the Christian Democratic Party. The secretive formation,
which has links to various extreme rightwing groups, refuses to
disclose its membership but has at least 20 federal MPs and 13
senators on its rolls, including some ALP members.
Under Australian law, appeals to the Review Board for the reclassification
or blanket censorship of films, literature or other publications
can be made by persons aggrieved or through state
or federal attorneys general. Although interventions by attorneys
general are rare, Williams took the unprecedented step of acting
directly on behalf of Nile, Harradine, and others because recent
applications by persons aggrieved to have films banned
have been unsuccessful.
Williams intervention follows a concerted six-year campaign
by the Howard government to establish a regressive censorship
regime. In 1996, following the Port Arthur massacre in Tasmania
where an individual killed 35 people, the government called for
tougher censorship laws and established the Senate Committee for
Community Standards to investigate violence in the media.
The committee declared that the interest of the community
should take precedence over individual liberty.
In 1997, the government passed the Broadcasting Services Amendment
Act, which removed all explicit, non-violent adult programs from
cable television. In 1998 it banned three films: Pasolinis
anti-fascist film Salo, a 1978 horror film I Spit on
Your Grave, and the documentary Sick: The life and death
of Bob FlanaganSupermasochist about the US performance
artist. In 1999, the government pressured the Federation of Australian
Commercial Television Stations into accepting stricter codes for
free-to-air television programming, with sex or nudity banned
unless serious cause and justification existed.
The same year, the Australian National Gallery axed the Sensation
exhibition from its program despite announcing a few months earlier
that Sensation would be the centerpiece of its 2000 program.
The gallery decision followed intervention by Communication and
Arts Minister Richard Alston. Last year the Review Board reclassified
Pictures, a book by critically acclaimed US photographer
Robert Mapplethorpe, after South Australian police seized the
publication from an Adelaide bookshop. The book was reclassified
Category 1-Restricted. Police claimed they were responding to
public complaints but refused to provide any details.
These measures have been accompanied by the replacement of
retiring OFLC classifiers and Review Board members with people
who are favourably disposed towards the governments political
agenda. Following unsuccessful attempts by the pro-censorship
lobby to have Adrian Lynes film Lolita and Catherine
Breillats Romance banned in 1999 and 2000 respectively,
the government began playing a more direct role in the final selection
of OFLC classifiers and Review Board personnel.
The Howard cabinet vetoed six prospective classifiers in 1999,
claiming those selected were not representative of ordinary
Australians, and in 2000 appointed Des Clark OFLC and Review Board
director. Clark is a Liberal Party hack and a close friend of
minister Alston. As Raena Lea-Shannon from the Watch on Censorship
group told the press last week, the OFLC and the Classification
Review Board have been stacked with new appointees
made to reflect the governments values.
Most members of the six-member Review Board are now senior
business personnel. Review Board convenor Maureen Shelley, a former
sub-editor for major daily newspapers, is Australian Council of
Businesswomen CEO and company director. Other recent appointees
include Jonathan ODea, a senior insurance manager and private
health insurance company director; Dawn Grassick, a microbiologist
and industry representative on the Therapeutic Goods Advertising
Code Council; and Jan Taylor, president of the Queensland branch
of the Women Chiefs of Enterprises International and a member
of the Queensland Advisory Committee of the Committee for the
Economic Development of Australia. Taylor is also the managing
director of a professional development and executive coaching
company.
None of these politically conservative elements have any serious
qualifications in the fields of art, film and literature. Attorney
General Williams simply handed the final decision to ban Baise-moi
to a body whose membership has been closely scrutinised by the
government itself.
Notwithstanding Baise-mois serious artistic limitations,
the film ban constitutes an assault on freedom of expression and
the democratic right of adults to read and see what they wish.
It is not coincidental that tighter censorship is being introduced
amidst a wave of severe cuts to social services. Mindful that
these measures will produce growing opposition, the government
is attempting to prevent the availability or emergence of subversive
or thoughtful artistic work that can enlighten or educate the
majority of the population.
While NSW Labor Premier Bob Carr and Victorian Attorney General
Rob Hullsrepresenting states that are home to Australias
major film production and distribution facilitiesinitially
criticised the film ban, their mild protests evaporated within
a couple of days. Nothing will come from these quarters to challenge
the Howard governments repressive censorship regime. Both
governments face elections in the next 12 months and are attempting
to secure support from the same layer of Christian fundamentalists
and rightwing elements that demanded the banning of Baise-moi.
See Also:
South Australian police
raid bookshop and seize Mapplethorpes Pictures
[19 January 2001]
The banning and unbanning
in Australia of the new French film Romance
[11 February 2000]
In Defense
of Artistic Freedom
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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