Age-based film classification system defining audience suitability — violence, language, and sexual content guidelines determine FSK, MPAA, or BBFC ratings. Governs theatrical and broadcast release.
You're shooting a scene that looks brutal — and suddenly the question arises: Will we get a 12 rating or will it fall under 16? The motion picture content rating system isn't just a bureaucratic hurdle. It influences your editing decisions, your budget, and who gets to see your film at all. In Germany, the FSK (Voluntary Self-Regulation of the Film Industry) governs the ratings — 0, 6, 12, 16, 18. In the USA, the MPAA (Motion Picture Association of America) works with G, PG, PG-13, R, NC-17. Great Britain has the BBFC with U, PG, 12A, 15, 18. The criteria differ subtly, but that's what makes it complicated: what gets a 16 rating in Germany might be an R in the USA and a 15 in Great Britain.
For you on set, this means specifically: You need to know which target rating the producer is aiming for — not just for moral reasons, but because it determines the length of violence scenes, the explicitness of sex scenes, and even the cinematography. A gunshot wound filmed with a close-up and blood spray will be perceived differently than the same scene with a cut to the reaction and implied violence. In the edit, the crucial question becomes: Do I hold the shot for more than three seconds? Do I cut away earlier? Do I include the sound? These details are often determined by the editor only after the content rating requirement is known.
In practice, production managers and distributors negotiate with the rating boards — not infrequently multiple times. You've shot it, the first cut is too intense for a 12 rating, so post-production work is necessary. That's why it's smart to clarify the planned rating with the producer during pre-production and shoot alternative takes: one version with a sharp cut, one with an earlier cutaway. This costs time but saves post-production costs later. Especially with international co-productions (keyword: multiple cut versions), this becomes the standard workflow. Some films have five different versions — depending on the region and target market.
Important: The system doesn't just regulate theatrical releases. Television, streaming platforms, even video rentals follow the same or similar guidelines — sometimes with their own codes. Netflix has an in-house rating system, ARD and ZDF adhere to FSK. For your production, this means: a rating once given isn't the same for all channels. A film rated 16 will not be shown at 8:15 PM on linear TV.