SEE VIDEO - Clips from the top ten movies banned in Ireland
Read more: The worst Irish accents in Hollywood movies
Ireland had a long history of banning films, but even some in recent time caught the attention of the censor.
Here are the top ten movies to be banned:
1. Clockwork Orange (Stanley Kubrick, 1971)
Stanley Kubrick's famous "Clockwork Orange" was banned in Ireland until 2000. Adapted from Anthony Burgess' best-selling novel the movie tells the story of Alex and his gang of violent 'droogs' who kill tramps and rape women.
The movie became infamous for inciting copycat behavior. This was thought to be the reason that Stanley Kubrick withdrew the movie in Britain. However, after his death his wife Christiane revealed that he pulled the film because his family had received death threats.
2. From Dusk Till Dawn (Robert Rodriguez, 1996)
This movie starring George Clooney, Quentin Tarantino and Salma Hayek tells the story of two criminals and their hostages who take refuge in an establishment populated by vampires. It was banned due to its demonic representations such as Salma Hayak's character, Satanico Pandemonium. The ban was lifted in 2000.
3. Meet the Feebles (Peter Jackson, 1989)
This black comedy movies features Jim Henson-esque puppets in a perverse comic satire. During its limited release in the U.S. in 2002 critic James Berardinelli wrote "The stories of these ... characters are told in a disgustingly graphic, obscenely offbeat, and caustically funny manner. Meet the Feebles is for those with a strong stomach and a seriously warped sense of humor. The film is so off the beaten track that it makes Monty Python seem main stream."
4. Monkey Business (Norman Z. McLeod, 1931)
This is the third of the Marx Brothers' movies starring the famous brothers Groucho Marx, Chico Marx, Harpo Marx and Zeppo Marx. The story takes place on an ocean liner crossing the Atlantic Ocean.
As with many of the Marx Brothers' movies the censors in the U.S. demanded that some of the lines with sexual innuendo be changed however in Ireland and some other countries the movie was banned entirely fearing it would encourage anarchic tendencies.
5. Monty Python's Life of Brian (Terry Jones, 1979)
The story of "Monty Python's Life of Brian" is that Brian is born in the stable next to Jesus and is therefore mistaken for the Messiah. It was banned in Norway, Singapore and Ireland because of its heavy religious satire. It was not well received by religious activists.
The makers of the film used the controversy at the time of its release to their advantage. They marketed the movie as "The film so funny that it was banned in Norway."
6. Monty Python's The Meaning of Life (Terry Jones / Terry Gilliam, 1983)
Similarly "The Meaning of Life" was banned for similar reasons. Again the highly irreverent movie did not go down well with religious groups particularly the musical sketch, starring Michael Palin, singing "Every Sperm is Sacred".
7. Natural Born Killers (Oliver Stone, 1994)
This Oliver Stone movie tells a story about a couple on a murderous rampage. Stone attempted to defend the movie explaining that it was a satire on how the news media can turn serial killers into celebrities. Although the censor never gave a reason it was banned in Ireland for many years.
8. Rocky Road to Dublin (Peter Lennon, 1968)
This documentary film on the contemporary state of the Republic of Ireland asked the question "what do you do with your revolution once you've got it?" Although the movie was never banned the Irish government did prevent it from being screened by the state broadcaster, RTE.
Having been accepted to the 1968 Canne Film Festival and Cork Film Festival agreed to screen the movie. Peter Lennon then set up his own private screening. This was followed by a Dublin cinema giving it a seven week run with packed audiences.
9. The Great Dictator (Charles Chaplin, 1940)
Charlie Chaplin's movie satirized Nazism and Adolf Hitler and was popular with the American public and in Britain. However during production it was planned that the movie would be prohibited in keeping with Britain's appeasement policy concerning Nazi Germany. The movie had been banned in many parts of Europe but the owner of London's Prince of Wales Theater screened it first and was fined for doing so. It became Chaplin's highest grossing film.
10. Ulysses (Joseph Strick, 1967)
An adaptation of James Joyce's great work the movie starred Milo O'Shea as Leopold Bloom, Barbara Jefford as Molly Bloom, Maurice Roëves as Stephen Dedalus, T. P. McKenna as Buck Mulligan and Sheila O' Sullivan as May Golding Dedalus. Fred Haines and Joseph Strick received an Oscar nomination for their screenplay.
The book had been at the center of controversy since its initial publication in 1922 and was banned for over a decade in the U.S. When his movie was banned in Ireland Strick said "I knew what kind of material I was choosing…but I was still surprised at the intensity of the reactions to the film. In Ireland the book had never been banned, but the film wasn't passed there until 2000."
12 Comments
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Switch to the desktop site to post a comment.adrienrain | Feb 11, 2011, 02:44 PM EST
Adding a few of these to my Netflix list.........,-p
veryluckyone | Feb 11, 2011, 11:59 AM EST
I posted it and the Riverdance on ice on my Facebook page. One because it was surprising that Ulysses would be banned, and the second because I can't imagine how the ice version could look anything like the original. Lots of ice chips flying is what I imagine.
Ainemaire | Feb 11, 2011, 10:37 AM EST
"Ulysses was never banned in Ireland - it just wasn't available.." this is adirect quote to me from long established Irish book publisher. I love it - it says sooooo much about us.
Ainemaire | Feb 11, 2011, 10:33 AM EST
Just want to share - remember seeing Monty Phyton's "Life of Brian" on a visit to London with a friend from Dublin -when I was young - we thought it was very funny and wondered why is banned at home!!!!!!!!
mmccreedy | Feb 08, 2011, 09:15 PM EST
I have seen 5/10 of these.
Newrone | Feb 08, 2011, 04:03 PM EST
"The movie had been banned in many parts of Europe... It became Chaplin's highest grossing film." Doesn't that just sum up the futility of prohibition? Whatever the substance. (I see my culture is lacking, too - I haven't seen most of these ;-))
fmcevoy | Feb 08, 2011, 03:56 PM EST
What about Disney's "Darby O'Gill and the Little People"? All the men were lazy drunks and all the women long-suffering enablers. Talk about Stepin Fetchett!
CitizenWhy | Feb 08, 2011, 01:49 PM EST
Well, Ireland certainly picks some very good movies to supply free publicity for.
FastEddy | Feb 08, 2011, 12:39 PM EST
So, why not Star Wars? A whole planetary civilization is destroyed ...hundreds of millions of people killed and it's not banned? We get it about the irreligious politically inspired sex, drugs and rock and roll, but ...
mcrdl76 | Feb 08, 2011, 11:20 AM EST
Regarding #9 The Great Dictator-Eire was a declared neutral during WWII and it was unlikely as by 1940 there was no appeasement policy in that the British govt. had already declared war on Germany the year before, after the Wehrmacht had invaded and then ultimately subdued Poland. The PM Winston Churchill fumed that Ireland remained neutral-but given the ever duplicitous nature of the Brit' and theirs political history- I feel it was entirely justified. Please do check your facts better next time! ;)
Yerffac | Feb 08, 2011, 10:14 AM EST
Appeasement of Hitler and banning Joyce, its great writer. Way to go, Ireland.
ktrush512 | Feb 08, 2011, 09:40 AM EST
The Great Dictator was not a silent film. In fact, one of the most controversial elements was Chaplin's monologue at the very end of the film.