Certificate 15 

The 15 certificate was introduced by the British Board of
Film Censors on 1 November 1982, following an overhaul of its classifications
as recommended by the Williams Committee. It is currently defined as follows:
Passed only for persons of fifteen years and over. No person
apparently under the age of 15 years shall be admitted to any exhibition at
which there is to be shown any film which has received a '15' certificate from
the British Board of Film Classification.
It was a direct replacement for the AA certificate, the only
difference being that the age limit was raised from fourteen to fifteen. In
1985, following the recommendations of the 1984 Video Recordings Act, the 15
certificate was extended to cover video releases.
While the increased age limit allowed the BBFC to be more
lenient with regard to classifying certain films, it became clear towards the
end of the 1980s that an additional classification was needed between 15 and
PG, as Hollywood in particular was producing an increasing number of films
aimed specifically at young teenagers. Since these films were considered too
strong for a PG, they were usually given a 15 certificate, thus preventing
their natural audience from seeing them.
As a result of increasingly public debate over this issue,
the BBFC introduced the 12 certificate in 1989.
The BBFC permits the following within the bounds of the
15 certificate:
Theme: No theme is prohibited, provided the treatment is
appropriate to 15 year olds.
Language: There may be frequent use of strong language; the
strongest terms are only rarely acceptable. Continued aggressive use of strong
language and sexual abuse is unacceptable.
Nudity: There are no constraints on nudity in a non-sexual
or educational context.
Sex: Sexual activity and nudity may be portrayed but without
strong detail. The depiction of casual sex should be handled responsibly. There
may be occasional strong verbal references to sexual behaviour.
Violence: Violence may be strong but may not dwell on the
infliction of pain, and of injuries. Scenes of sexual violence must be discreet
and brief.
Imitable techniques: Dangerous combat techniques such as ear
claps, head-butts and blows to the neck are unlikely to be acceptable. There
may be no emphasis on the use of easily accessible lethal weapons (in
particular, knives).
Horror: Sustained or detailed infliction of pain or injury
is unacceptable.
Drugs: Drug taking may be shown but clear instructive detail
is unacceptable. The film as a whole must not promote or encourage drug use.
Taken is a good example of a certificate 15 film as it has
strong language, mild sexual content, strong violence, imitable techniques and
some drug use.
Because so many features are used in the film it makes a
good, strong 15 film.
Our film will be certificate 15. It will include scenes of
strong language, strong bloody violence and horror, as it is a vampire-based
film. The reason we have made our film certificate 15 is because the full story
for our piece will include strong use of the features shown which would be too
intense for a younger audience.
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