Variety: Malaysian Filmmakers, Academics Slam Expanded Censorship Rules: ‘Filmmaking is Now a Dangerous Vocation’
By Patrick Frater, Variety
In a number of industries, harsh draconian regulation is destroying the creativity and competitiveness of the sector. The Malaysian film industry is one such case.
Non-profit organization seeks deregulation and classification, instead of censorship and intolerance.
Filmmakers in Malaysia are predicting more arrests and criminal investigations if the government pushes through proposed guidelines to the country’s censorship system and expands the remit of the Film Censorship Board (LFP).
Malaysia has in recent years gained itself an intolerant reputation after numerous bans or restrictions on Hollywood and Asian films that have been widely released elsewhere. These have included Pixar’s “Buzz Lightyear” and Marvel’s “Thor: love and Thunder,” apparently due to their LGBT subplots or characters, and 2017 Indian blockbuster “Padmaavat” on religious grounds.
But the Freedom Film Network says that by expanding film censorship the government is undermining the development of the local, Malaysian, film industry that authorities proclaim to support.
“Filmmaking is now a dangerous vocation in Malaysia and far from the internationally competitive industry the Prime Minister imagines,” the organization said this week in an open letter. “With the new LPF guidelines we could potentially see an increase in arrests and investigations.”
Government is proposing to expand the scope of the LPF and to give national guidelines a more pro-Islamic stance.
Section 2.1.1 of the new LPF religious guidelines mean that films touching on “teaching that promotes anti-God [beliefs], atheism, agnosticism, scientology, religious pluralism, liberalism, blasphemy, supporting fanatical beliefs, criticising, denouncing or discrediting any religion” will be subject to more scrutiny.
After questioning whether the new rules can be applied to the embassies of foreign government, as the government is also proposing, the Freedom Film Network says that the regulations’ anti-liberal provisions and those against religious pluralism both violate the country’s founding principles or Rukun Negara.
Malaysia is a federal constitutional monarchy, with a multi-ethnic population of Malays, Chinese and Indians. “The Rukun Negara guarantees a liberal approach towards our traditional heritage that is rich and diverse,” the organization said.
The Freedom Film Network is a non-profit organization that began as the FreedomFilmFest in 2003, Malaysia’s first and longest running human rights film festival, which will see its 20th edition this year. It produces and promotes social filmmaking in Malaysia through grants and capacity building and has produced original research about film censorship.
“Our statement comes after sustained engagement with the film censorship board. Unfortunately, it appears that only the most conservative stakeholders have had their feedback incorporated into the guidelines,” a spokesperson told Variety.
Other academics have already described the new regulations as “reactionary.” Khoo Gaik Cheng of the University of Nottingham recently told the Free Malaysia Today publication that “the guidelines appear to target liberals,” and that “if in the past, filmmakers have complained that the guidelines were vague, suddenly these subpoints outline in a micro-managerial way what is forbidden, and in this case, it is much worse.”
“There is no room for subjectivity and criticism at all, even of one’s own faith [..] We are a nation much more impoverished by these guidelines,” said Khoo.
In recent years, successive Malaysian government have become more assertive in their efforts to rein in parts of the entertainment and media industries.
In 2017, Disney pulled the release of its “Beauty and the Beast” after the LPF sought four minutes of cuts, far more that the film’s famous ‘gay kiss’ moment.
Last year, Amanda Nell Eu, director of the coming-of-age drama and body horror film “Tiger Stripes” disowned the version of the film that was released in her home country. Though the film received the Grand Prize at the 2023 Cannes Critics’ Week and was selected as Malaysia’s Oscar contender, at home material conveying the “joy of being a young girl in Malaysia [..] who is maybe different from the rest, misunderstood, or has the urge to express herself differently from others,” was deleted on the instructions of the LPF.
This year the director and producer of the film “Mentega Terbang,” which depicts a Muslim girl exploring other faiths, was charged with hurting the religious feelings of others. The film has been banned, but last week a magistrates’ court ruled that the filmmakers may challenge the constitutionality of the Section 298 charges and take the case to the High Court.
And in another incident, in March this year, the Johor Yellow Flame organization was successfully prosecuted for a planned screening of the Hong Kong protest film “She’s in Jail.” The screening was canceled by enforcement officers from the Home Ministry. Organizer Lee Chen Kang was fined.
Further regulation seems a possibility.
In mid-2022, Deputy Communications and Multimedia Minister Zahidi Zainul Abidin, said that the government and the Islamic Affairs Department (or JAKIM), were committed to curtailing the spread of LGBT culture in the country. He blamed “foreign elements” for the problem.
In March this year, Home Minister Saifuddin Nasution Ismail said that he planned to hold meetings with the Communications Ministry with a view to extending the remit of the LPF to video streamers. Currently, the LPF has jurisdiction over theatrical releases, but not content carried on the internet.
Originally published in Variety 20th June 2024
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Wahlau eh! Blimey! Except for "supporting fanatical beliefs", I'll fail everything of that fcuking big list of control freakery thought police "Section 2.1.1 of the new LPF religious guidelines", filmmaking or not.
I would have considered a film about a gender ambidextrous politician caught with his sarong down who was destined to become the president of a country. He had to get out of the predicament, of, on the one hand, being blackmailed by a foreign power or two, and on the other, a bunch of those he had indulged in arse-bonking with.
He sensed he was about to be exposed. The CIA confirmed that. The Chinese secret service confirmed that. The Singapore secret service confirmed that. The politician had no idea who among all who knew about his indulgence was going to go to town with that bit of information. None of his arse-bonking buddies could be trusted either.
Then a stranger steps in. A lesbian hitperson with both a penis and a vag. She/he/it offers to do a hit job on all who knew the sordid side of the politician with the personality carefully and methodically crafted by his handler wife. "She" is actually a man dressed as a Catholic nun. She holds a killer weapon, a fan for when the brown stuff flies in her/his direction.
The clock is ticking fast, little time is left before the announcement in a couple days by a one-eyed one-legged iman the politician is to become the president of Moronesia. Most of the presidents and prime ministers the world over will be present for the big day. So will be the arse-bonking partners and other arse-bonker admirers of the politician.
The politician quickly accepts the hit job by the assassin Martha Harry, everyone who "knows" was to be eliminated.
Then news came in from the ever-awake ever-vigilant Singapore secret police, a number of hit jobs have been taken out on the politician. The orders were all made by the politician's partners pissed off that their sport activities with the politician and their identities will be revealed.
There's will be a lot of hits, and, after my draft has gone to the polisher and makeover artists I hope my story would also be a hit. Subject to a lot of things and the now "extended" censorship, of course.
Well, if you've followed my drift this far you'll work out my concerns, principally if I'll ever pass the thought police. After I've gone through the grammar police...
Meanwhile, fcuk the control freaks. And fcuk the censors.