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Preparation of Rewriting

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  • I plan to make a major edit to this article. I'll flag the In use and others don't make any edits in the meantime to avoid unnecessary edit wars.
Revised highlights:
  1. The page was renamed to List of banned films in the People's Republic of China.
  2. Added definitions section, and I'll list more than one source. (Reason: so that there is a consistent standard)
  3. Movies on the list will be re-edited, with full source replacement.
I will delete the previous films, the Communist Party's film censorship was introduced after 1949. Also remove the ROC paragraph, the US Congress passed a new decree that Taiwan cannot be marked as part of China. Of course, some might think this is a political division, but I'll rename the page at the same time.
Note: I am not asking for consent from other users here. Mass revisions mean rewrites, sweeping edits. I will translate to English using trusted sources. --Beta Lohman (talk) 14:32, 23 February 2022 (UTC)[reply]
I agree that the page needs rewrites. But, generally speaking (and this isn't limited to this article), you can't just "I am not asking for consent" because that's not how collaborative editing works. I also oppose renaming the article on the basis of other topics on China are simply named as "China", and additionally oppose removing pre-1949 films. I do think a geographical / geopolitical scope could be defined WITHOUT renaming the article. A definitions section will also need to be discussed as the scope has been discussed extensively on the history of this article. ~Cheers, TenTonParasol 16:03, 23 February 2022 (UTC)[reply]
  • I can't get into the details deeply, because it's a waste of time, wait until the discussion is over, and then get into an argument and no one can solve it. A complete rewrite can only be done, and then a verifiable version is formed, so many films without a source have to be removed.
I don't even know if your Excellency has the ability to read Chinese? The user page doesn't mention the Babel level.
Changed its name to the People's Republic of China, and there is no need to call it China for short. The PRC's film censorship system is very Soviet-style, and the preceding paragraph will be deleted. Move to another page even if it exists, maybe the title could be Chinese Film Censorship (18XX-1945) or something else.
Geopolitics can't be generalized, or rewritten with some other source, but completely rewritten, with a new definition explaining the Communist Party's film censorship (and a legal one).
Otherwise the page might even have to be abandoned in order to satisfy a single requirement.
In addition, a lot of copyright-infringing content has been added to the page since 2017, and there were no historical paragraphs in the previous version.--Beta Lohman (talk) 18:44, 23 February 2022 (UTC)[reply]
There's currently only three entries on the list that are unsourced, so I'm not sure what what the "many films without a source have to be removed" refers to. I believe that a lot of the films need to be re-organized to better match what the sources actually say, but they are indeed referenced entries. My inability to read Chinese does not have a bearing on the situation and structure of the page. Also, I don't oppose fixing the entire history section, and I would be glad to see that rewritten (I do have a question if one can copyvio government documents, but that's besides the point, it needs to be rewritten to be more coherent and accessible)—but I do not see why the article needs to be restricted to those years. There is no justification for a split or for a rename. Also, this is why I said the concept of a "definition" will need to be discussed. I also didn't say the geopolitics can be generalized, but rather we can clarify what we're including in relationship to a complex geopolitical problem without having to rename the article. For what it's worth, the existence of Censorship in Taiwan and Censorship in Hong Kong means that we can absolutely just take out information relating to Taiwan and Hong Kong and move it to those two articles, or creating separate film articles, and I absolutely support doing so. And this is why I pointed out a discussion—the concept of censorship is rather broad: what is the definition you're proposing for this page? ~Cheers, TenTonParasol 18:51, 23 February 2022 (UTC)[reply]
I've posted notices of this discussion at WT:FILM and WT:CHINA since the split, rename, and definition of scope seems to warrant a larger discussion than just the two of us, and especially given this page has been, ah, contentious in the past. ~Cheers, TenTonParasol 19:02, 23 February 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Uninvolved editor here who came from the China project page — While COMMONNAME normally is sufficient justification for just calling the PRC China, in this case there may be reason to make the split, namely, if the Republic of China engaged in substantive film censorship before 1949, when it fled to Taiwan. In that case, circa 1914 to 1949 film censorship in China would have been by the ROC government, and from 1949 onward it would fit within the scope of censorship in Taiwan (the ROC military regime under the KMT did indeed do a lot of film censorship during the Cold War era) whereas mainland China was governed by the CCP. Retaining "Film censorship in China" at that point would solely be a geographical sort of thing, even though what constituted "China" in the body would include two diametrically opposed polities, and accordingly, laws and modes of censorship.
I share a bit of confusion that TenTonParasol expresses with regards to what sort of changes are going to be made here, but in any case I think we can go ahead and be BOLD and work out the details later. Cheers and best of luck, Beta Lohman. WhinyTheYounger (WtY)(talk, contribs) 17:11, 5 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, I will also note that I'm not quite sure this article needs to be list-ified rather than maintained as an article. In fact, it might get way too unwieldy to have a list of all films censored in China in one way or another. WhinyTheYounger (WtY)(talk, contribs) 17:13, 5 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
There's a 2010s movie censorship in the paragraph, that's talking about the Taiwanese government. It's been so many years, and it's ridiculous to include Taiwan in it. After 1949, the Taiwanese government has no control over the films released in mainland China.--Beta Lohman (talk) 03:59, 6 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Y'know, I think that's fair on the dates, that this article should be from post-1949 and then anything else should go to Censorship in Taiwan (splitting into Film censorship in Taiwan as necessary) and then anything specifically relating to Hong Kong going to Censorship in Hong Kong. But I still do not think the article should be renamed to "Film censorship in the People's Republic of China" if just because the main article this is split from is just at "China". Unless Censorship in China is moved to Censorship in the People's Republic of China, this article shouldn't be named. But, I do come around to having it narrowed down. ~Cheers, TenTonParasol 17:36, 6 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
To @TenTonParasol: I ask again. So that means you are against page renaming only? Or are you also against a complete rewrite of the entry, and you insist on keeping the pre-1949 part? If so, then I won't be able to do any rewriting work. Because it must be maintained in an uncontroversial version, that is, no one can make large-scale changes. These questions are for confirmation, no intension to be revised and then inexplicably undid back.--Beta Lohman (talk) 03:22, 7 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
  • @WhinyTheYounger: Since I have limitation on the timetable, I hope that consensus had better reached as soon as possible. First, I'll completely rewrite the article and create two sections, "Overview" and "Definition." The overview will describe the situation of film censorship in the People's Republic of China, the legislative process, and more. The definition describes what films were officially banned, or given to SARFT by Hollywood studios, but failed to pass censorship.
There, for example, 2001's Tomb Raider, a film that was not released in China after censors pointed out numerous problems. The Chinese news sources are here [1][2], and any English source will not mention why that movie was banned.--Beta Lohman (talk) 03:13, 7 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
At this point, I'm only opposing renaming. I support moving pre-1949 to another relevant censorship article, or creating a separate film censorship article entirely for it, and having this cover post-1949.
Honestly, I still don't think a specific "Definition" section is warranted because whether it was Officially Banned or failed to pass standards and thus not released can simply be included in the existing table, which already lists of both items you're seeking to "define". For example, Red Dawn is listed as simply unreleased, Joker as specifically not approved, and The Dark Knight as not submitted at all due to related censorship reasons in addition to films that were outright banned. I think pushing for a "Definition" section is trying to address an issue that doesn't exist at this article. I think the table needs to be cleaned up, and I'm thoroughly willing to do that myself while Beta rewrites the history, but I think the table is already handling the proposed "Definition" section.
And, "Overview" is a poor name for a section, it sounds like you're simply rewriting "History"? ~Cheers, TenTonParasol 03:37, 7 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
@TenTonParasol:
Why would there be such a big opinion on these two names? That's the title of the chapter. First, the definition is for more clarity, citing 3 sources to explain what is called a banned film. This is to make the space clearer, here it has to be clear that not showing in China, not passing the censorship is not the same thing, even though the result looks the same.
The overview is not to rewrite history, but to describe the legislative process of film censorship in China from the 1990s, and the background of the times was that China was going to enter the WTO, so the market must be opened as soon as possible. I will use a Chinese paper to talk about the legislative process in great detail. In addition, China's film regulations have undergone two changes in 1996 and 2001, and China's film censorship department has undergone several changes. This part also delineates a table to present.
This is an academic paper, see for yourself.[1]
  1. ^ :梁婷婷 (2018). "中國電影的立法之路——從《電影管理條例》到《電影產業促進法》" [The legislative road of Chinese film: from Regulations on Administration of the Films Industry to Film Industry Promotion Law] (PDF). 政大機構典藏.
And why limit me to only rewriting history? I plan to do a full source replacement of the list. I don't think fixing just one section at all will solve the problem of vague definitions, and not all films that haven't been released in China should be included. For example, the world-famous banned film "Baise-moi" is banned in many countries, but it is introduced on the Chinese website, but now there is no page on Douban. This can only be regarded as not being released in China, and the source of the ban cannot be found.--Beta Lohman (talk) 04:10, 7 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
I have an opinion on these two section names because the article needs to be laid out in an encyclopedic manner. "Overview" suggests something different from what you're proposing, which is a "History" section. You're describing two the history of censorship legislation in China. I do not see why what you've described cannot be integrated into the existing "History" section, which needs to be rewritten as is. The academic paper you provided would fit very well into the existing "History" section to explain these legislative processes. Separating these processes into an "Overview" section is confusing and poor layout of the article.
Also, I don't understand what you mean by a "full source replacement". Please do not remove sources from the article unless they are bad sources. And, you misunderstand about how sourcing works. Blaise-moi actually CANNOT be added to the list because we do not have a source saying it was not released in China; a lack of a page on Douban is NOT verification it was not released, therefore Blaise-moi cannot be added on the basis of lacking a Douban page. Absolutely do not add information to the page to the effect of "there is no page on Douban, therefore it can be regarded as not being released in China". That is not how sourcing works.
As an aside, you do not need to ping me. I watch this page, so I will see your replies here in time. ~Cheers, TenTonParasol 04:19, 7 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
To TenTonParasol,
The communication seems to be very inefficient. You are completely misunderstood. Baise-moi does not have a page on Douban, which means it is not released in China. Not every movie that hasn't been released in China should be on the list, and the same goes for other movies. I know what the source means.
Full source replacement is the removal of content that has no source. Or a movie should be removed from the list without being banned.
I read an insinuation that it seems that I can't make massive revisions without authorization, but only improve what is already there? This doesn't fit my rewrite plan at all. Also, Ping is used to reply to a specific user. --Beta Lohman (talk) 04:40, 7 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
I feel like I understand you, but I will repeat what I believe we are both saying just to make sure we are saying the same thing: Baise-moi should not be included on the article. Any film added specifically needs a source that directly, specifically, and explicitly says some version of either "this film was banned" or "this film was not released" and going "Source: lacks a Douban page" is not sufficient. Because Baise-moi does not have this, it cannot be included. Have I understood correctly?
Okay, I better understand "full source replacement" now because that initially sounded like you intended to remove sources entirely. You wish to properly source information that is currently without citation, got it. (Though, I am still confused because there are no major portions of the article that are unsourced, but it is what it is.) I still do not understand what is meant by "Or a movie should be removed from the list without being banned."
I am not disallowing massive revisions on the page—in fact, I'm encouraging you to make the proposed rewrites to integrate the academic information and legislative processes you seek to have added to the page. My understanding of your proposal is a complete revision and replacement of what's in "People's Republic of China". My comment was essentially: why does the section need to be named "Overview" when it's about history of processes?
Also, generally speaking, improving articles generally does mean improving what is already here so long as it is relevant, deleting only information that shouldn't be included at all. Besides the information that will be moved to Taiwan and Hong Kong specific articles, which will be removed from here as we agreed, is there post-1949 information you believe should be removed as well? ~Cheers, TenTonParasol 05:12, 7 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
  • To TenTonParasol,
Yes, that's right. Movies cannot be listed without a clear source stating that they are banned.
The rest of the rest is hard to explain because your desired version is so far from my rewrite plan. To explain more, I am afraid to bring more misunderstandings.
This is my rewrite plan. I want to focus on the banned movies in the People's Republic of China, so I have to start all over again, the historical part is too finely divided, and even the broken content has to be removed or rewritten. The specific operation process is omitted first, lest you start to interrupt my plan when you hear it.
The way the entries are now divided is messy. So a lot of paragraphs need to be cut and even the prose cut down. However, my editing method is to use a list, so the structure will become a list of banned movies in China. This way the topic becomes another article.
Unwanted sources may be removed to conform to the rewritten schema. Therefore, the chapter name will be changed to "Overview", which is a brief description of the process. The "definition" is to explain what is a banned film, and what kind of movie is banned in the eyes of the Chinese authorities. Here's what I mean.
The Chinese Communist Party's film censorship was not officially enacted until 1996, and my focus is on banned films in the People's Republic of China. That's why I suggested changing the title to "List of Banned Movies in the People's Republic of China". Once rewritten, the subject of the entry will focus on banned films, or films that fail censorship. The time period is 1996-2001 and 2001-2017, and after 2018.
But as I read from the previous message, you seem to be leading me towards some kind of script, and it seems like you're trying to keep things as they are as much as possible.
It seems we can't reach a consensus. Well, it's almost two weeks into the discussion, and no editors are moving forward. Well, I give you the source, then you write it the way you want, then I retire according to the schedule.--Beta Lohman (talk) 14:13, 7 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]

We literally fully agree on what the rewrite should be. I'm just saying call the "Overview" section "History" instead BECAUSE I agree with you that the current prose in the article needs to be replaced, trimmed, and rewritten. I'm literally agreeing with you that we need to delete the entire "History" section and replace it with something better, and I'm saying I think your "Overview" proposal is that. I just don't know why it needs to be called "Overview" specifically instead of "History". I'm saying do the rewrite, just the part that's "overview" should be "History" instead because it's a better section name. That's it. ~Cheers, TenTonParasol 15:38, 7 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Arbitrary break

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Then there is no consensus on the name change, why not focus on the censorship system of the People's Republic of China? This is the existing regime and also applies to most of what follows.
Is there any problem to rewrite the article? --Beta Lohman (talk) 10:45, 9 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
You're more than welcome to start editing as you see fit. WhinyTheYounger (WtY)(talk, contribs) 14:18, 9 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Ditto. It's already been stated that we're all in agreement about the changes you're going to make. We're just trying to figure out where the information already on the page that is now out of scope should be moved to. ~Cheers, TenTonParasol 14:58, 9 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
I also ask, Beta Lohman, that you be less aggressive regarding other potential contributors to the rewrite. A pending major rewrite does NOT mean nobody else can or should edit it, and it is inappropriate to try to use {{under construction}} to warn other people away from editing. Others may edit the page while it's under construction. Per the instructions in that template, place {{in use}} while you're actively making the major edit to prevent any edit conflicts. ~Cheers, TenTonParasol 19:35, 9 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
  • To TenTonParasol,
In use can only be used for 2 hours, after which it will be automatically removed by the robot. I see you've edited again and posted a critique in the edit summary. You have so many opinions, why don't you write it yourself? Again, are you trying to follow some script and lead the direction of the entry? And then revise every edit record immediately after I edit it? If so, I'll give up trying to rewrite.--Beta Lohman (talk) 00:12, 10 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
I genuinely am not. I'm just remarking the proper use of {{under construction}}. You cannot instruct others, including editors who might just be passing by, to NOT edit an article that is not in active change. There is a REASON {{in use}} can only be used for a short time before it is automatically removed, and those templates warn not to "unnecessarily discourage others from contributing to the article". I'm just remarking the language added to the template was improperly un-collaborative. Please follow the instructions given by the template you added. This is less about this specific article but rather a general attitude to editing, and I think it would be of benefit to be less defensive of contributions you've made or intend to make. All I've done is remark that you cannot blanket tell the community to stop editing the article for several hours if you're not making edits right now.
I also please ask you to assume good faith (WP:GOOD FAITH). I am not interested in asserting a specific version of the article. And, in fact, any comments I've made about the rewrite is about where to move existing content and renaming one (1) header in your proposal. I have no plans to significantly refactor any rewrites or additions, except perhaps to make grammatical corrections (and I genuinely hope you don't interpret that as trying to push a script). ~Cheers, TenTonParasol 00:44, 10 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
Then you should stop drawing the red line. Having discussed this for so long, I keep getting new rules and restrictions that don't help the whole project, or even add obstacles. It's quite annoying to keep getting warning messages.--Beta Lohman (talk) 01:21, 10 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]
If you consider any of this a "red line" or strict rules or regulations, then I feel you may have continue to struggle in collaborating with others on the project. I'm simply asking you to follow the usage parameters of the template you added to the page and to stop inappropriately unnecessarily warning others to not make changes. Anyway, please, if you'd like to make the rewrite, it is indeed welcomed. ~Cheers, TenTonParasol 02:40, 10 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Major revision edition 1

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Such a description should not be included. The Chinese Communist Party only imported Soviet films at that time, and Hong Kong films and other Western films were not allowed to be imported. This is equivalent to putting more than 100 movies in the world into the list, and it is an immeasurable number.

--Beta Lohman (talk) 11:31, 12 March 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Major revision edition 2

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  • I delete the historical section from 1949 to the 2020s of the ROC. I discussed the topic on the page before, but I will tell again. Basically, the article has to be rewritten entirely even on the history part. The deletion reason is found as follow:
After 1949, the Kuomintang government could no longer implement effective film censorship in China. These contents will be film censorship of Taiwan. So I removed this ridiculous historical narrative passage. --Beta LohmanOffice box 20:10, 19 April 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Major revision edition 3

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I plan to make massive changes as follows.

  1. The history section will be completely rewritten, keeping only the content closely related to the theme.
  2. Separate some of the films in the list, and create an new entry List of Banned films in the People's Republic of China. I estimate that there are many movies banned by the PRC, this list may be updated frequently, and a long-form entry requires condensed bytes.
  3. Unreleased movies will be removed from the list. Because some movies are not released in China and the reason cannot be found out from reliable sources. It's hard to say whether such films are actually banned.

--Beta LohmanOffice box 08:20, 25 May 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Hi Beta, I moved the post-1949 ROC section to Cinema of Taiwan#Film censorship. Please also fix it a bit. -142.112.236.29 (talk) 03:08, 4 June 2022 (UTC)[reply]
@142.112.236.29: I'll see it. But fix what?--Beta LohmanOffice box 19:19, 4 June 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Update

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  • I have finished editing and have completely rewritten the historical passages and added the essays as reliable sources. In addition, I removed 26 movies from the list to the new list.
The movies that are sure how to be banned and those with official bans are put in the List of films banned in China, where there are detailed details. The list in this article will be kept for now, even I think the description of the suspected banned films is not very accurate, and I will leave it for other researchers.
I'll have to suspend editing the entry if there are no questions. What has to be done is done, and the article size has been reduced.--Beta LohmanOffice box 11:07, 30 June 2022 (UTC)[reply]

New instance of censorship

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Minions: The Rise of Gru should be added to this list as an example of movie censorship in China. Good day, fellows! (talk) 14:35, 9 September 2022 (UTC)[reply]