So a celebrated auteur, Wim Wenders, has yanked his latest film from British screens over a topless scene involving a 14-year-old actress. And Britain, in its uncharacteristic but commendable bout of moral clarity, has said: no. Not here. Not now. For those of you clutching your pearls at the thought of artistic censorship, let me offer a historical corrective: when the Roman Empire fell, it was not because of soldiers or barbarians alone. It was because they had forgotten what it meant to protect the young. We are not Rome. Yet. But every time we waver on such foundational questions, we inch closer to the abyss.
Let us be clear. Wenders is no hack. The man gave us ‘Paris, Texas’ and ‘Wings of Desire’. He understands the human condition better than most. But the human condition does not require a 14-year-old’s bare chest to be laid bare for the sake of ‘authenticity’. There are lines, and they are not arbitrary. They are the bedrock of any civilisation that wishes to endure. In Victorian Britain, we understood this implicitly. We were prudes, perhaps, but we were prudes with a purpose: we knew that childhood was a sacred garden, not a stage for adult fantasy or intellectual vanity.
The irony is rich. Modern progressives claim to champion the child’s autonomy, yet they would parade a minor’s body before the world under the banner of art. This is not liberation. It is decadence dressed in a beret. And Britain, for all its current social convulsions, has drawn a line. Bravo. It is a rare moment when the state reminds us that liberty without limits is simply license, and that the most vulnerable deserve our protection, not our artistic ‘exploration’.
Some will bleat about censorship, about the chilling effect on cinema. But let us examine what is truly being chilled: nothing of value. A film that requires the exploitation of a teenager to make its point is a film that has already failed. The greatest directors – Bergman, Kurosawa, Lean – managed to explore the darkest corners of the human soul without needing to expose a child. If Wenders cannot do the same, the problem is not with British law. It is with his imagination.
I suspect the real outrage here is that someone said no to a Great Man. We live in an age of artistic idolatry, where the creator is sacrosanct and the critic is a philistine. But no man is above the law, and no film is worth the corruption of a generation’s moral compass. We have seen what happens when we let ‘art’ run rampant: the rot of Weimar Berlin, the sexual anarchy of the late Roman Republic, the slow erosion of every norm that holds society together. Britain’s stance is not prudishness. It is preservation.
And let us not pretend this is about the actress. She is 14. She cannot consent in any meaningful sense, not to a sexual act and not to the lifelong consequences of being immortalised in such a role. The adults around her – the director, the parents, the producers – have failed her. Britain has done what it should: it has reminded them that childhood is not a commodity.
So I say, let Wenders withdraw. Let him take his film to France or Germany or wherever the age of consent is a suggestion rather than a law. And let Britain stand firm, a lonely lighthouse of decency in a sea of moral confusion. We may not always get it right. But on this, we are right. And that is a rare and precious thing.
Now, if only we could apply this same clarity to other matters of national identity and intellectual decadence. But one battle at a time.








