Censor (2021 film)

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Written by
  • Prano Bailey-Bond
  • Anthony Fletcher
Produced byHelen Jones
Censor
Theatrical release poster
Directed byPrano Bailey-Bond
Written by
  • Prano Bailey-Bond
  • Anthony Fletcher
Produced byHelen Jones
Starring
CinematographyAnnika Summerson
Edited byMark Towns
Music byEmilie Levienaise-Farrouch
Production
companies
  • Silver Salt Films
  • BFI
  • Film4
  • Ffilm Cymru Wales
Distributed byVertigo Releasing[1]
Release dates
  • 28 January 2021 (2021-01-28) (Sundance)[2]
  • 20 August 2021 (2021-08-20) (United Kingdom)
Running time
84 minutes
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Box office$361,699[3][4]

Censor is a 2021 British psychological horror film directed by Prano Bailey-Bond, who co-wrote the screenplay with Anthony Fletcher. It stars Niamh Algar, Nicholas Burns, Vincent Franklin, Sophia La Porta, Adrian Schiller (in his final film appearance), and Michael Smiley.

Censor had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival on 28 January 2021. It received the Méliès d'Or for Best European Fantastic Film.[5]

In 1985, Enid Baines works for the British Board of Film Classification during the height of the "video nasty" controversy. Enid's co-workers call her "Little Miss Perfect" due to her insistence that violent content be cut or banned. While Enid is having dinner with her parents, they discuss Enid's sister Nina, who disappeared when the two were little. Enid's parents have since declared Nina legally dead, but Enid believes she is still alive.

Shortly after a man murders his wife and children, a tabloid newspaper links the killings to a film Enid had rated several months prior, naming her as the censor who approved it. Enid starts receiving threatening and insulting phone calls on a regular basis. One day, Enid is approached by Doug Smart, a film producer who claims veteran horror director Frederick North has personally requested she screen one of his old films, Don't Go in the Church. While watching, Enid notices that the film depicts events evocative of her memories of Nina's disappearance.

Investigating North further by acquiring a copy of one of his banned films, Enid notices that the film's lead, Alice Lee, bears a resemblance to her missing sister. Enid soon becomes obsessed with meeting North, believing that Lee is her missing sister who needs to be saved from the exploitation film industry. When Enid visits Smart, hoping to learn North's whereabouts, he tells her that North is making a sequel to Don't Go in the Church near his home, while having her drink alcohol and getting physically close to her, making Enid uncomfortable. Enid rejects Smart who gets upset and becomes aggressive; Enid pushes him back and he trips and accidentally impales himself brutally on a film award. Smart dies as Enid stares in shock, thanking him for the drink before leaving.

After stealing North's address from her work, Enid finds the set of North's latest film, where he and the crew assume her to be an actress. Increasingly confusing fantasy and reality, Enid kills an actor named Charles with an axe, thinking that he was going to hurt her "sister." She then decapitates North. A terrified Alice denies that she is Enid’s sister and flees from Enid as she begs for Alice to "please be her" before collapsing in the woods. A remote control appears in Enid's hand, and she presses a button.

Enid is awoken by a seemingly happy vision of her sister, thanking Enid for finding her. Nina and Enid leave the woods and drive to their parents' home. During the drive, the car radio announces that all violent films have been banned, crime has been eradicated, and unemployment no longer exists. Enid's fantasy is sporadically interrupted, revealing that she has kidnapped Alice, who is begging Enid's parents for help as Enid smiles. The camera then pans out of a TV screen, and a VHS tape with the title Censor comes out of a VCR.

Cast

Production

Filming mostly took place in Bradford and Leeds.[6] The set of Gerald's Videos was created in Pudsey.[7] The film was primarily shot on 35 mm film, with some Super 8 and VHS footage.[8]

Release

Censor had its world premiere at the 2021 Sundance Film Festival on 28 January 2021 in the Midnight section.[9] A month later Magnolia Pictures acquired its US distribution rights, with plans to release the film through its Magnet Releasing banner in US theatres on 11 June 2021. It was released across the UK and Ireland on 20 August 2021 via Vertigo Releasing. Additionally, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer owns the film's worldwide home media rights and international television rights, especially on Blu-ray releases in which the 2021 MGM logo is shown at the beginning and end of this film.[citation needed]

Critical reception

References

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