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Dated: 4 May 2005 Complainant Broadcaster |
Members
Joanne Morris, Chair
Tapu Misa
Diane Musgrave
Paul France
Complaint under section 8(1)(a) of the Broadcasting Act
1989
Ultimate force – British drama about elite SAS unit – showed mock
interrogation of woman prisoner – woman at different times shown naked,
hooded, and being hit – allegedly in breach of violence standard
Findings
Standard 10 (violence) – low-level violence – violence in context,
not gratuitous – not upheld
This headnote does not form part of the
decision.
[1] Ultimate force, a British drama centred around the elite British SAS Red Troop unit, was broadcast on TV One at 8:30pm on 18 January 2005. A central storyline of the episode concerned a soldier’s efforts to become the first female member of the SAS. The soldier was shown undergoing mock interrogation as part of her training and assessment; at different times she was shown being verbally abused, naked, and being hit.
[2] The item was preceded by a visual and verbal warning that read:
This programme is rated Adults Only and contains violence that may disturb, and language and nudity which may offend some people
[3] Gail Marmont complained to Television New Zealand Ltd, the broadcaster, that the portrayal of the beating and humiliation of the female soldier was gratuitous. Ms Marmont observed that as the storyline unfolded, no sense emerged that this type of treatment was unacceptable, and to the contrary, the violence was portrayed as a necessary part of the Red Troop culture.
[4] Ms Marmont observed that New Zealand has a high rate of domestic violence, despite other advances for women, and stated that evidence suggests a “vicious backlash in explicit violence being shown towards women in film and video”. Ms Marmont concluded that many men and young people who watch such violence may feel justified in treating women in a similar manner.
[5] The following standard from the Free-to-Air Television Code of Broadcasting Practice is relevant to the complaint:
Standard 10 Violence
In the preparation and presentation of programmes, broadcasters are required to exercise care and discretion when dealing with the issue of violence.
Guideline
10a Broadcasters should ensure that any violence shown is not gratuitous and is justified by the context.
[6] TVNZ declined to uphold the complaint. It noted the following points:
[7] TVNZ did not accept that the violence was gratuitous, submitting that it was integral to the central theme of the female soldier’s struggle for acceptance in what was historically an all-male environment. It argued that the scene would have lost an element of reality if the viewer had been asked to believe that the woman was being treated with the same level of harshness as male recruits, without the violence and humiliation being shown. Similarly, it would have been incongruous to have shown her being treated more gently than male recruits. TVNZ noted that the woman was shown coming through the training programme in what was “clearly presented as a triumph for her gender in an all-male environment”.
[8] TVNZ concluded that TV One had exercised “care and discretion” in dealing with the violence, as the standard requires. It noted that the programme had an AO classification, and was shown after the 8:30pm watershed, in AO time. Furthermore, TVNZ noted, it was preceded by a warning.
[9] Ms Marmont was dissatisfied with this response and referred her complaint to the Authority. In her referral she made a number of points:
[10] TVNZ added nothing further in its response to the referral.
[11] The members of the Authority have viewed a tape of the broadcast complained about and have read the correspondence listed in the Appendix. The Authority determines the complaint without a formal hearing.
[12] The Authority considers that in the context of the programme, the broadcaster took sufficient care in dealing with the portrayal of the violence against the female soldier. There are a number of contextual factors that the Authority has taken into account in coming to this decision:
[13] While in some scenes the female soldier was naked – which could potentially aggravate the nature of the violence against her – the Authority considers this was appropriate in the context of the storyline. The nudity was non-sexual and, in the Authority’s view, the scene was intended to convey the extent to which a senior officer was prepared to go to subject the female recruit to the harsh realities of enemy interrogation.
[14] In these circumstances, the Authority considers that TVNZ’s actions demonstrated sufficient care and discretion in dealing with the violence in the programme, and concludes that Standard 10 was not breached.
For the above reasons the Authority does not uphold the complaint
Signed for and on behalf of the Authority
Joanne Morris
Chair
4 May 2005
The following correspondence was received and considered by the Authority when it determined this complaint: