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Unthinkable is a 2010 American thriller film directed by Gregor Jordan and starring Samuel L. Jackson, Michael Sheen and Carrie-Anne Moss. It was released direct-to-video on June 14, 2010. [ 2 ] The film focuses on the sanctioned torture of a man who has threatened to detonate three nuclear bombs, planted in three large U.S. cities.
YouTube Censored: A recent History by the OpenNet Initiative: an interactive map that shows a rough history of YouTube censorship since 2006. "Free Speech in the Age of YouTube" in The New York Times, September 22, 2012; Google Transparency Report
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If there were Oscars for chutzpah, “The Unthinkable” would be a cinch: The first feature for a Swedish collective who’ve been making short films together since childhood, it manages a ...
N.W.A's debut album Straight Outta Compton (which had attracted controversy for its song "Fuck tha Police") includes the song "Express Yourself", which criticizes the censorship of music by radio stations, and hip-hop musicians who write inoffensive songs to target mainstream radio airplay. "Express Yourself" is the only song on the album to ...
This movie was filmed from January to May 2001, four months before the 9/11 attacks. [citation needed] City by the Sea (2002) - The movie has some shots of the World Trade Center that were not edited out. Gangs of New York (2002) – The film ends with the New York City skyline containing the Twin Towers. The filmmakers had filmed the shot ...
Children's Island (film) Chillerama; Circumstance (2011 film) Clerks (film) Clock Cleaners; A Clockwork Orange (film) Clownhouse; Color of Night; Committee on Obscenity and Film Censorship; The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover; Coonskin (film) The Cove (film) Cracks (film) Crash (1996 film) Crash (2004 film) Crazy/Beautiful; Criminals Gone ...
Film portal; Controversies involving films in the United States, as topics of prolonged public dispute or debate, usually concerning matters of conflicting opinion or point of view in the United States. This is for articles about the controversies themselves, not articles about films which are considered controversial.