Kansas Movie Censors
Even
though All Quiet on the Western Front earned
Academy Awards for best director and best picture in 1929, it failed
to gain support from Kansas censors. A state board of review, appointed
to protect all Kansans from obscenity and other evil influences, deleted
from the popular movie a scene that showed a boy being paddled by his
teacher. In 1927 Emil Jannings won an Oscar for best actor in The
Way of All Flesh but lost out with the review board. Two scenes
containing the sign "Adulterer" and three bedroom shots were eliminated.
For nearly half a century the board met each day in the basement of
the Kansas City, Kansas, city hall recording comments on film review
cards. Although a national censorship board had been established, Kansans,
involved in prohibition and progressive movements, wanted more restrictions
on films. The board, formed in 1917, usually was composed of women with
family ties to prominent politicians. They considered lust, crime, violence,
racial inferiority, and alcohol consumption unwholesome viewing for
Kansas audiences.
Although critically acclaimed, the committee caused D.W. Griffith's
epic film The Birth of a Nation to be banned
from 1915 until 1923 for promoting racism and historical inaccuracies.
The board slashed scenes with diaper changing, a man in his underwear,
and suggestive dancing. Tarzan, hanging by his feet in the 1922 film
The Adventures of Tarzan, was considered
too revealing.
Drops of blood on the snow from the 1927 movie The
Bells was judged too violent. Scenes of a safecracker working
a combination on Below the Dead Line in
1929 and the sound of an execution in the 1928 film Across
to Singapore were also unsuitable. The 1929 films The
Alibi, showing a man thumbing his nose at an officer, and Affairs
of a Rogue with a German actress speaking the words "My God,"
were considered antisocial.
Decisions by the U.S. and Kansas Supreme Courts brought an end to
state censorship in 1966. In one of its last actions, the board sent
the film review cards and other related documents to the state archives,
ensuring that its recommendations would be remembered. The collection
comprises 80,000 thousand cards that are being preserved in 68 acid-free
containers, each the size of a shoe box.
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