10 Great Films Banned For Ridiculous Reasons

By Tom Baker /

10. Ireland Deemed Brief Encounter Too Permissive Of Infidelity

Everyone accepts that Brief Encounter is, yes, one of the most romantic films ever made about extra-marital affairs. But the whole point of the David Lean classic is that it's a romance that can't work €“ that's why there's the classic ending of Celia Johnson's bored housewife tearfully chasing after the train her lover, Trevor Howard, is leaving on. It's not a film that thinks cheating on your husband is a good thing, but neither does it suggest that you should stick in a dead-end marriage, either. It's all about passion, darlings! A favourite topic of writer Noël Coward. When Brief Encounter made it to Ireland on its release in 1945, they found it to have a very definitive message. Irish audiences had to wait a little longer to see the most feted British romance in history because the country's film board deemed the film to be €œtoo permissive of adultery€, something which obviously never happened in a good Catholic nation (and which the film never, ever addresses and is the reason the couple don't stay together in the end anyway).