Eirin is similar to the Motion Picture Association of America ratings system in the United States, the British Board of Film Classification in the United Kingdom, and the Office of Film and Literature Classification in Australia; it classifies films depending on their suitability for minors, depending on whether they contain sexual or violent material.
They were submitted for Revision at the Office of Film and Literature Classification (Australia's censorship board) and officially given new Classification logos and simpler Classification Advice.
film | drama film | silent film | film director | Sundance Film Festival | short film | horror film | Film director | Documentary film | literature | Cannes Film Festival | Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film | musical film | film adaptation | independent film | Nobel Prize in Literature | English literature | Microsoft Office | action film | Toronto International Film Festival | Home Office | War Office | National Film Board of Canada | Köppen climate classification | The Office | television film | film producer | Literature | Venice Film Festival | Titanic (1997 film) |
The film was refused classification in Australia by the Office of Film and Literature Classification upon its review in 2005 and remains banned in the country.