- James Ferman
James Ferman (
April 11 ,1930 –December 24 ,2002 ) was an Americantelevision andtheatre director. He was also director of theBritish Board of Film Classification from 1975 to 1999.Before working at the BBFC Ferman worked on TV series such as "
Emergency Ward 10 " and many documentaries. He also wrote thelibretto for the musical "Zuleika ".Ferman gained, amongst some, reputation as an overzealous censor as result of his refusal to allow several films from the 1970s to be released following tightening of restrictions on film in Britain in the 1980s. It was felt by many cultural commentators that these films, including works such as "
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre " were of some cultural value and furthermore could not be considered extreme relative to more modern releases.Ferman was also well known for his keenness to remove references to certain weapons, with the result that sequences involving nunchuks, no matter how innocuous, were removed. A prime casualty of the ruling were the "
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles " films which were aggressively pruned.However the other side of Ferman's tenure was that under his management cuts to films, once routine, became exceedingly scarce. While liberal commentators complained about his dogged refusal to release certain films, others (such as
Mary Whitehouse ) saw him as excessively lenient. This dichotomy was clear right up to the end of his tenure when he was criticised both for refusing to allow the release of "The Exorcist" and for permitting the uncut release ofDavid Cronenberg 's "Crash". He was also unfairly accused of the withdrawal of theStanley Kubrick film "A Clockwork Orange", a decision which was in fact taken by Kubrick himself.On his retirement from the BBFC, Ferman called for a relaxation of the restrictions applied to
hardcore pornography in the UK, suggesting that this would discourage illegal material.External links
*imdb name|id=0272742|name=James Ferman
*Screenonline name|id=458174|name=James Ferman biography and credits
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