BEIJING, March 4 (Xinhua) -- China won't adopt a film
rating system for the moment, the publications watchdog said.
Liu Binjie, General Administration of Press and
Publications (GAPP) director, told reporters here on Tuesday that the country
will not take the measure until "the market has been completely standardized",
the New Express report.
There were two major concerns for the decision, he
said. First, film rating was still a topic "too sensitive" for the general
public. Secondly, China had yet to build a mature and orderly film market.
"Under the current circumstances, a film rating
system equals legalizing the mass production of pornographic publications," Liu
said.
The proposal of a rating system was first raised in
2001 by Wang Xingdong, a movie director and a then-member of the Chinese
People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC). The proposal, however, has
failed to come to anything over the years.
A new round of debate was ignited late last year with
the release of Ang Lee's award-winning film "Lust, Caution".
Containing bold sex scenes, the Venice Film
Festival's Golden Lion winner for Best Picture was cut by seven sexually
explicit minutes for its screening on the Chinese mainland. Critics argued it
wouldn't have had to be tailored if the country had a rating
system.