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Paranoia Agent Collectors Blu-ray Will Be Uncut

posted on by Andrew Osmond
All previous U.K. home editions of the series had an 80-second cut to episode 8, due to compulsory BBFC ruling

MVM has Tweeted the following message regarding its upcoming Collectors Blu-ray edition of Satoshi Kon's TV series Paranoia Agent, due for release on April 19.

"We're happy to announce our upcoming Collector's Edition Blu-Ray release of Satoshi Kon's Paranoia Agent will be fully uncut!"

In previous UK editions of the series, episode 8 of the series was censored in Britain after a compulsory ruling by the BBFC. MVM had previously Tweeted that it had resubmitted the episode for review.

The series first had a DVD release from MVM from 2005, in four volumes. (Discussion of suicide follows.) The BBFC requested the compulsory cut to the eighth part of the series, called "Happy Family Planning." This is a mostly self-contained story, a macabre black comedy. The story involves three people who meet online, intending to kill themselves together. Two of the trio are adult men, but they're shocked to realise the third person is a preteen girl, who seems to regard suicide as a game.

In one scene, the three characters try to hang themselves in the mountain. In the unedited episode, the girl is shown bouncing happily up and down with the rope around her neck, chanting "Swing! Swing!" (finally, she breaks the tree branch, sending them all tumbling). However, this scene, lasting 80 seconds, was cut entirely from the UK DVD of the episode, following the ruling by the BBFC.

Responding to inquiries about the cut in the past, the BBFC has made its reasoning clear. Although the relevant DVD was rated 18, the BBFC still judged that the scene of a child "enjoying" being hanged was irresponsible and harmful, and that underage children could be influenced by the scene.

In August 2020, the Ghibliotheque podcast ran an episode on Paranoia Agent. In it, presenter Michael Leader said that he had asked the BBFC for a new comment on the issue, and received a reply. However, the reply did not say whether the series would be censored if it was resubmitted for classification Referring to the decision in 2006, the reply said:

"We believe that adults should be free to choose their own entertainment and where possible, we will always attempt to deal with a classification issue through the appropriate use of our classification categories. However, in occasional circumstances, a work may raise an issue that requires intervention and compulsory cuts may be required before we are able to award a classification.

"In the case of Paranoia Agent, a compulsory cut was issued in 2006 in response to material relating to the issues of suicide in episode 8. Our classification guidelines state that portrayals of potentially dangerous behaviour, especially relating to suicide, self-harm and asphyxiation, which children and young people may potentially copy, will be cut if a higher classification is not appropriate, and so consequently in 2006, the BBFC considered the portrayal and treatment of the issue of suicide in Paranoia Agent to be potentially harmful, and issued a compulsory cut in accordance with out classification guidelines."

The 13-episode television anime series premiered in Japan in February 2004. Genon Entertainment describes the anime:

When the darkness overcomes the heart, Lil' Slugger appears..."
After the first victim's story, the police felt the overly stressed woman was having a breakdown and lied to cover-up for some crime. However, after the third and fourth attacks upon unrelated victims led to the same description of a young attacker with a golden baseball bat and in-line skates, the police had to wonder - is the "Lil' Slugger" real or some kind of sinister phantom?

Satoshi Kon directed the series at Madhouse, and Kon is also credited with the original work. Seishi Minakami and Tomomi Yoshino wrote the scripts, and frequent Kon collaborator Susumu Hirasawa composed the music.


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