A relic of 1970s cinema has been quietly shelved, and the ripples are passing through the British film industry like a stiff breeze through a decaying reel. Wim Wenders, the German auteur whose road movies gave existentialism a steering wheel, has withdrawn his 1975 feature 'The Wrong Move' from circulation. The reason? A brief scene featuring a topless 14-year-old actress. The director, now 78, has cited an inability to secure a modern indemnity waiver for the footage. It is a decision that speaks volumes about the distance we have travelled from the freewheeling, morally ambiguous era of New German Cinema.
Let us pause, however, before we drape ourselves in the shroud of outrage. Wenders is not being cancelled by a mob with smartphones. He is preemptively acting on a cultural logic that has become ingrained in British broadcasting standards. The BBFC, our guardians of taste and decency, have for years been tightening the screws on what is permissible. A topless 15-year-old in 'The Blue Lagoon'? That got a pass in 1980. Today, it would be unthinkable. And yet, 'The Wrong Move' is not a film about titillation. It is a rambling, existential journey through post-war Germany, a poem shot on celluloid. The offending scene, by all accounts, is fleeting and contextual. But context, as we have learnt, is no longer the currency it once was.
The human cost here is twofold. First, there is the actress herself, who at 14 had no say in the archival fate of her work. She is now an adult, and may feel differently about the scene than she did when she was a teenager conscripted into an art film. Wenders, in his statement, seemed to acknowledge the ethical quicksand: he did not want to subject her to renewed scrutiny. Second, there is the cultural loss. 'The Wrong Move' is part of a trilogy, a companion to 'Alice in the Cities' and 'Kings of the Road'. Its withdrawal creates a hole in the art house canon. Film historians, students, and cinephiles will now find it harder to access a key work from a master. The BFI, which had shown the film as recently as 2018, will conform to the new reality.
What does this tell us about the British film industry? That we are in a period of anxious self-correction. The #MeToo movement, the reckoning with historical abuses, and a sharper awareness of child protection have made every distributor and producer nervous. But there is a danger that in cleaning house, we also throw out the chiaroscuro. Cinema has always traded in discomfort. Think of Louis Malle's 'Pretty Baby' or Stanley Kubrick's 'Lolita'. They are disturbing, but they are also documents of their time. To seal them off is to pretend that history was not messy.
And yet, on the street, the reaction is likely to be a collective shrug. The average British filmgoer under 30 has never heard of 'The Wrong Move'. They are more concerned with the latest superhero franchise or a Netflix true-crime documentary. The cultural shift is not just about puritanism; it is about irrelevance. The battle over a 50-year-old art film is a skirmish in a war that has already moved on.
Wenders' decision is the right one, legally and ethically. But it leaves a bitter taste. It is a reminder that art is fragile, and the standards we apply today can erase the complexity of yesterday. Perhaps the only solution is to view such scenes with a label, a warning, a historical asterisk. Not a deletion, but a contextualisation. Until then, we are all just trying to steer a wrong move in the right direction.









