MovieChat Forums > It Always Rains on Sunday (1949) Discussion > "This film has been approved for A (Adul...

"This film has been approved for A (Adult Audiences)"


Hi. I have just started watching this film on TCM. At the very beginning, before the credits, there was a title card that read "This film has been approved for A (Adult Audiences)" the A was in a square box like we do with our ratings today. I have not seen a title card like that before and have watched a fair amount of movies from the 40's and 50's. From the host's monologue prior to the film, I know this was considered a bleak and dark film at the time of its' release. But were certain films back then approved for an Adult audience? I thought back then with the Hayes code everything either was Passed or Approved or it wasn't. I didn't think there were gradations like how we have today with the R rating, etc. Any info would be appreciated!

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I've seen this title card on a number of British films from the '30s and '40s. In the UK they did indeed have a letter-based rating system at the time, but there was no equivalent system adopted in the US until the late 1960s.

Meanwhile, the Hayes Code applied only to Hollywood product. You'll find that films made in England during this time are generally more liberal about language ("hell" and "damn" get tossed around, as well as ethnic slurs) or about sexual situations that were glossed over in the era's Hollywood movies.

On the other hand, the Brits were more prudish about horror films. The Hollywood horror movies of that time, which look so tame to us now, were usually given the equivalent of an "X" rating, which meant no children were allowed. I recall hearing that even the 1939 Wizard of Oz was given this rating, because the British censors were concerned the Witch would scare the kids!

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the British censors were concerned the Witch would scare the kids!

And they were damned right. She gave me nightmares for years!

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It was those horrible flying monkeys that gave me the shivers!

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