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AnX rating is afilm rating that indicates that the film contains content that is considered to be suitable only for adults. Films with an X rating may have scenes ofgraphic violence or explicit sexual acts that may be disturbing or offensive to some viewers. The X rating is used in different ways by different countries, and it may have legal or commercial implications for the distribution and exhibition of such films. For example, some countries may ban or restrict the sale or rental of X-rated films, while others may allow them only in specific theaters or with special taxes. Some countries may also have different criteria or definitions for what constitutes an X-rated film, and some may consider the artistic merit of the film as a factor in classification. The X rating has been renamed or replaced by other ratings in some countries over time.
TheAustralian Classification Board (ACB, formerly known as the OFLC), a government institution, issues ratings for all movies and television shows exhibited, televised, sold, or hired in Australia. Material showing explicit, non-simulated sex that is pornographic in nature is ratedX18+.[1]
People under 18 may not buy, rent, exhibit, or view these films in cinemas. The exhibition or sale of these films to people under the age of 18 years is a criminal offence carrying a maximum fine of $5,500. Films classified as X18+ are forbidden from being sold or rented anywhere in the sixstates of Australia. They are legally available to be sold or hired in theAustralian Capital Territory and theNorthern Territory. Importing X18+ material from these territories to any of the Australian states is legal, as theconstitution forbids any restrictions on trade between the states and territories.[citation needed]
Films may be shown in theaters in France only after classification by an administrative commission of theMinistry of Culture. In 1975, theX classification (officially: "pornographic or violence-inciting movies",films pornographiques ou d'incitation à la violence) was created for pornographic movies, or movies with successions of scenes of graphic violence. The commission has some leeway in classification; it may for instance take into account the artistic qualities of a movie to not count it as "pornographic". Movies with an X rating may only be shown in specific theaters; they bear higher tax rates and cannot receive any aid from theCentre national du cinéma et de l'image animée, whether for the movies themselves or for the theaters screening these movies.[2][3] Some of these taxes were repealed in 2020 because they weren't rentable enough.[4][5]
1100 movies were X-rated in France, with the last classification occurring in 1996, as pornography went from theaters to video, which doesn't undergo as much control as cinema. The lastadult movie theater in Paris, theBeverley inParis, closed down in 2019 only leaving the Vox inGrenoble.[6][7][8]
Only ten movies were X-rated for violence:Open Season byCollinson,Lola byJosé María Forqué,Pique Nique (short film) by Gérard Bienfait,The Texas Chain Saw Massacre byTobe Hooper,Hitch-Hike byPasquale Festa Campanile,Return of the 38 Gang byGiuseppe Vari,The Warriors byWalter Hill,Frauengefängnis 3 byJesús Franco,Mad Max byGeorge Miller andDawn of the Dead byGeorge A. Romero; most of these subsequently received lower ratings. For example,The Warriors andMad Max are now rated '12'.
In 2000, some conservative associations sued the government for granting the movieBaise-moi (Fuck me), which contained graphic, realistic scenes of sex and violence, a non-X classification. TheCouncil of State ruled that the movie should have been rated X as it was then the only rating which banned this films to minors. The decision was highly controversial, and the '18' rating was reestablished for movies not pornographic or violence-inciting;Baise-moi became the first movie to have been awarded the newly reestablished '18' rating, which had been replaced by '16' in 1990.[9][10][11][12]
In 2009,Histoires de sexe(s) byOvidie and Jack Tyler was ordered by the Classification Board to be X-rated; the directors then withdrew their demand for a cinema certificate and released their moviedirect-to-video.[13][14]
The originalX certificate, replacing theH certificate, was issued between 1951 and 1982 by theBritish Board of Film Censors in theUnited Kingdom. It was introduced as a result of theWheare Report on film censorship.[15] From 1951 to 1970, it meant "For exhibition when no child under 16 is present" and from 1970 to 1982 it was redefined as meaning "Suitable for those aged 18 and over". The X certificate was replaced in November 1982 by the18 certificate.
Sometimes the rating of a film has changed significantly over time. For example, the French filmJules and Jim received an X rating in 1962 that was reduced to a PG (Parental Guidance) rating in 1991, and later raised to 12A in 2021.[16] In some cases, films with extreme political content received an X rating.Battleship Potemkin was refused a certificate for "inflammatory subtitles andBolshevik propaganda" in 1926, passed X in 1954, and finally rated PG in 1987.[17]

In theUnited States, theX rating was applied to a film that contained content judged unsuitable forchildren, such as extreme violence, strongly implied sex, and graphic language. When theMPAA film rating system began in North America on November 1, 1968, the X rating was given to a film by the Motion Picture Association of America (now theMotion Picture Association) if submitted to it, or due to its non-trademarked status, it could be self-applied to a film by a distributor that knew beforehand that its film contained content unsuitable for minors. From thelate 1960s to about themid-1980s, many mainstream films were released with an X rating, such asMidnight Cowboy,Medium Cool,The Girl on a Motorcycle,Last Summer,Last of the Mobile Hot Shots,Beyond the Valley of the Dolls,The Street Fighter,A Clockwork Orange,Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song,Fritz the Cat,Flesh Gordon,Alice in Wonderland: An X-Rated Musical Comedy,Last Tango in Paris andThe Evil Dead. Films that achieved critical and commercial success were later re-rated R after minor cuts, includingMidnight Cowboy andA Clockwork Orange. The threat of an X rating also encouraged filmmakers tore-edit their films to achieve an R rating; one notable example of this was the 1987 action filmRoboCop, which had to be edited eleven times before it could attain an R rating.[18]
Because the X rating was not trademarked, anybody could apply it to their films, including pornographers, as many began to do in the 1970s. Aspornography began to become more popular and more legally and commercially tolerated, pornographers placed an X rating on their films to emphasize the adult content. Some even started using multiple X's (i.e. XX, XXX, etc.) to give the impression that their film contained more graphic sexual content than the simple X rating. In some cases, the X ratings were applied by reviewers or film scholars, e.g.William Rotsler, who wrote "The XXX-rating is forhardcore, the XX-rating is forsoftcore, and an X-rating is for comparatively cool films."[19] Nothing beyond the simple X rating has ever been officially recognized by the MPAA. Because of the heavy use of the X rating by pornographers, it became associated largely with pornographic films, so that non-pornographic films given an X rating would have fewer theaters willing to book them and fewer venues for advertising. Many newspapers refused to advertise X-rated films. This led to a number of films being released unrated sometimes with a warning that the film contained content for adults only. In response, the MPAA eventually agreed in 1990 to a newNC-17 rating that would be trademarked, and could only be applied by the MPAA itself. Bytrademarking the rating, the MPAA committed to defending an NC-17 film charged with violatingobscenity laws.[citation needed]