The board currently issues four certificates. Originally, there were two: U (unrestricted public exhibition with
family-friendly movies) and A (restricted to adult audiences but any kind of
nudity not allowed). Two more were added in June 1983 that are U/A (unrestricted public exhibition, with parental guidance for children under 12) and S (restricted to specialised audiences, such as
doctors or
scientists). The board may refuse to certify a film. Additionally, V/U, V/UA, V/A are used for video films with U, U/A and A carrying the same meaning as above. Variations of the U/A certificate were introduced in November 2024: U/A 7+, U/A 13+ and U/A 16+.
U certificate Films with the U certification are fit for unrestricted public exhibition and are
family-friendly. These films can contain universal themes like
education, family,
drama, romance, sci-fi, action etc. These films can also contain some mild violence, but it cannot be prolonged. It may also contain very mild sexual scenes (
without any traces of nudity or sexual detail).
U/A certificate Films with the U/A certification can contain moderate adult themes that are not strong in nature and are not considered appropriate to be watched by a child without parental guidance. These films may contain moderate to strong violence, moderate sexual scenes (traces of nudity and moderate sexual detail can be found), frightening scenes, blood flow, or muted abusive language. Sometimes such films are re-certified with V/U for video viewing. The age threshold was previously set at 12 years of age, but in 2024 this was further refined to 7, 13 and 16 years of age. •
UA 7+ – Unrestricted public exhibition, but with parental guidance for children below the age of 7 years and appropriate above the age of seven. •
UA 13+ – Unrestricted public exhibition, but with parental guidance for children below the age of 13 years. •
UA 16+ – Unrestricted public exhibition, but with parental guidance for children below the age of 16 years.
A certificate Films with the A certification are available for public exhibition only for adults (
18+). These films can contain strong violence, explicit and strong sexual scenes, abusive language, but words which insult or degrade
women,
men or any
social group are not allowed. Controversial, adult or suggestive themes are considered unsuitable for young viewers. Such films are often re-certified with V/U and V/UA for
TV, which does not happen in the case of U and U/A certified movies. == History ==