Zarchi was unable to find a distributor, so he distributed the film himself.
Day of the Woman played a number of engagements in rural
drive-in theaters, but only for brief runs each time, and Zarchi barely made back the money he had spent on advertising. In 1980, it was picked up for distribution by the Jerry Gross Organization. A condition of this re-release was that the distributors could change the title to anything they wished. It was at this time the film was retitled
I Spit on Your Grave. The movie did not have a theatrical release in the United Kingdom and was solely released on home video in that country.
Controversy The film caused significant controversy and backlash for its graphic violence, particularly the rape scene, with feminists protesting the movie and people accusing the movie of glorifying rape. The
Motion Picture Association of America tried to prevent the film's producers from using the R rating. After the association gave
I Spit on Your Grave an R rating, the producer of the film added rape scenes, making it an X-rated movie. Ultimately an agreement was reached where the film removed any references or explicit shots referring to
anal rape and the MPAA restored the original R rating. In an interview with
Fangoria, director Meir Zarchi said as a response to the backlash:
Censorship efforts Many countries, including
Ireland,
Norway,
Iceland and
West Germany, banned the film altogether, claiming that it "glorified violence against women".
Canada initially banned the film, but in the 1990s decided to allow its individual provinces to decide whether to permit its release. Since 1998, some provinces (such as
Manitoba,
Nova Scotia, and
Quebec) have released the film, with a rating that reflects its content. The censored American version of the film was released in
Australia in 1982 with an R 18+ rating. In 1987, the film survived an appeal to ban it. It continued to be sold until 1997, when another reclassification caused its ban in Australia. In 2004, the full uncut version was awarded an R 18+, lifting the seven-year ban. The Office of Film and Literature Classification justified this decision by reasoning that
castration is not sexual violence (Australian censorship law forbids the release of films that depict scenes of sexual violence as acceptable or justified). In the
United Kingdom, the film was refused a cinema certificate by the British censors. However, since films on video did not need censor's certificates at the time, it was released on home video, where it was branded a "
video nasty" by the press. It appeared on the
Director of Public Prosecutions' list of prosecutable films until 2001 when a heavily cut version that extensively edited the rape scenes was released with an
18 certificate. The cuts were reduced considerably from 7 minutes 2 seconds in the 2001 release to 2 minutes 54 seconds in the 2011 release so that only the scenes of rape that focus on Jennifer's nudity have been banned since the 2011 release. In
New Zealand, the uncut version of the film (102 minutes) was classified in 1984 as R20 with the descriptive note, "Contains graphic violence, content may disturb". Other versions with shorter running times (96 minutes) were also classified in 1984 and 1985 and received the same classification. The
Irish Film Classification Office has again banned the film from sale. Having been banned for many years in the country, the new Blu-ray and DVD uncensored edition have been prohibited from purchase by retailers due to the nature of the film.
Home media Elite Entertainment released
I Spit on Your Grave on
LaserDisc on December 8, 1998. Elite later issued a
DVD as part of their Millennium Edition collection on December 17, 2002. The film received its first
Blu-ray release on September 20, 2010, in the United Kingdom from 101 Films. It was released in an 'Ultimate Collector's Edition', containing the film on both Blu-ray and DVD, a collector's booklet, and a poster. At the time it was the most complete version released in the UK, but it was not uncut - cuts of almost three minutes were required for an '18' rating to the rape scenes (previous UK releases were cut by over seven minutes). It was also released alongside the
remake in a 'Limited Collector's Edition' on February 7, 2011, in the UK. It was again submitted for UK DVD in 2020, and was passed with lesser cuts, this time totaling 1 min. 41 secs. It was released on February 8, 2011, in the United States from
Starz/
Anchor Bay Entertainment. Ronin Flix released a three-disc collector's edition Blu-ray box set in 2020. The film was released again by Ronin Flix on
4K UHD on October 26, 2021 in a three-disc set, followed by a single-disc version on November 23, 2021. ==Reception==