Assistance de TMDB

Hey guys,

At this time, we only support a specific list of countries for TV certifications. They are as follows:

  • Argentina
  • Austria
  • Australia
  • Brazil
  • Bulgaria
  • Canada
  • Chile
  • Czech Republic
  • Denmark
  • Finland
  • France
  • Germany
  • Greece
  • Hungary
  • Indonesia
  • Ireland
  • Israel
  • India
  • Italy
  • Lithuania
  • Malaysia
  • Mexico
  • Morocco
  • Netherlands
  • New Zealand
  • Norway
  • Philippines
  • Poland
  • Portugal
  • Puerto Rico
  • Romania
  • Russia
  • Singapore
  • Slovakia
  • South Africa
  • South Korea
  • Spain
  • Sweden
  • Switzerland
  • Taiwan
  • Thailand
  • Turkey
  • Ukraine
  • United Kingdom
  • United States of America
  • US Virgin Islands

If you would like to see a missing country added, let me know below. I've been using this guide on Wikipedia as a reference.

Updated April 26, 2024

181 réponses (sur la page 7 sur 13)

Jump to last post

Page précédentePage suivanteDernière page

@dorondavid said:

Is there an option to correct the names of some languages in Hebrew? thanks

It is better not to mix the subjects.
This topic is intended for TV ratings.
Create a new topic with your new question.
And you can give 3 or 4 examples.
With Movie Link, and the title you consider correct.

@Kunduz_1905 said:

Hi, I would like Turkey added. Here is the TV and Movie Wiki links.
*TV: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Television_content_rating_system#Turkey
*Movie: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motion_picture_content_rating_system#Turkey

Thnx

Any progress for Turkish Rating System?

Mexico (TV & Films)

  1. AA: audience: Content aimed at children - timetable: any - rating type: informative
  2. A: audience: all ages - timetable: any - rating type: informative
  3. B: audience: 12 years and up - timetable: 4:00 pm to 5:00 am - rating type: informative
  4. B-15: audience: 15 years an up (minors of 15 require supervision) - timetable: 9:00 pm to 5:00 am - rating type: informative
  5. C: audience: 18 years old and up - timetable: 10:00 pm to 5:00 am - rating type: restrictive
  6. D: audience: Adults only - timetable: midnight to 5:00 am - rating type: restrictive

see: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direcci%C3%B3n_General_de_Radio,_Televisi%C3%B3n_y_Cinematograf%C3%ADa

https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direcci%C3%B3n_General_de_Radio,_Televisi%C3%B3n_y_Cinematograf%C3%ADa_(M%C3%A9xico)#Criterios_Espec%C3%ADficos_para_Clasificaci%C3%B3n

https://web.archive.org/web/20180703032353/http://rtc.gob.mx:80/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Television_content_rating_system#Mexico

@travisbell said:

Hey guys,

At this time, we only support a specific list of countries for TV certifications. They are as follows:

  • Australia
  • Brazil
  • Canada
  • France
  • Germany
  • Hungary
  • Lithuania
  • Netherlands
  • Philippines
  • Portugal
  • Russia
  • Slovakia
  • South Korea
  • Spain
  • Thailand
  • United Kingdom
  • United States of America

If you would like to see a missing country added, let me know below. I've been using this guide on Wikipedia as a reference.

Please Add Indian Ratings. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Television_content_rating_system#India

@travisbell said:

Hey guys,

At this time, we only support a specific list of countries for TV certifications. They are as follows:

  • Australia
  • Brazil
  • Canada
  • France
  • Germany
  • Hungary
  • Lithuania
  • Netherlands
  • Philippines
  • Portugal
  • Russia
  • Slovakia
  • South Korea
  • Spain
  • Thailand
  • United Kingdom
  • United States of America

If you would like to see a missing country added, let me know below. I've been using this guide on Wikipedia as a reference.

Please Add Taiwan Ratings (TV & Films). https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Television_content_rating_system#Taiwan

@travisbell said:

Hey guys,

At this time, we only support a specific list of countries for TV certifications. They are as follows:

  • Australia
  • Brazil
  • Canada
  • France
  • Germany
  • Hungary
  • Lithuania
  • Netherlands
  • Philippines
  • Portugal
  • Russia
  • Slovakia
  • South Korea
  • Spain
  • Thailand
  • United Kingdom
  • United States of America

If you would like to see a missing country added, let me know below. I've been using this guide on Wikipedia as a reference.

Costa Rica use the same certification than United States of America. (not in that list) Let me know if you need that I do the update in the wikipedia page

Hi, This is the Italian Rating for TELEVISION CONTENT. It is used by TV channels when they have to broadcast both films and TV series. Obviously the classification of the films is based on a censorship visa for the films which is indicated for each film by the authorities in according to the law. Below I have indicated the classification for movie.

In Italy the classification system changes according to the television station that broadcasts the program. But in general two systems are used in Italy. The most used is inspired by traffic lights. It is used for classifications by Rai, Mediaset and in general by all national television broadcasters excluding Sky Italia. It is used for both movies and TV series.

  • 🟢 –> Green label: all ages admitted. Indicates that the vision of a program is generally suitable for everyone since the content inside it is of zero or mild impact (but may not be suitable for very young children).
  • 🟡 –> Yellow label: parental guidance suggested. Warns that for viewing the program we recommend viewing accompanied by an adult because of content with a moderate impact. Generally this warning is valid for children or young people up to the age of 13. The content of programmes with such classification should always be totally suitable for children from the age of 14.
  • đź”´ –> Red label: Only for adults. Warns that viewing a program is generally recommended for an adult audience because of its strong content. A warning will also be shown before airing.

The classifications used by Sky Italia for all its channels (paid or free) are the following:

  • T or PT –> All ages admitted. (T = Tutti = Everyone or PT = Per Tutti = For Everyone)
  • BA –> Parental guidance suggested. (BA = Bambini Accompagnati = Accompanied children)
  • VM12 –> Forbidden for children under 12. (VM = Vietato ai Minori = Prohibited to minors)
  • VM14 –> Forbidden for children under 14.
  • VM18 –> Forbidden for children under 18.

Classification according to law for film (used for example when you go to cinema or buy DVD ecc.) but in general for all video content, is this:

  • T or PT –> All ages admitted.
  • VM6 –> Forbidden for children under 6.
  • VM14 –> Forbidden for children under 14.
  • VM18 –> Forbidden for children under 18.

It would be really fantastic if you could implement it, as indicated by law, together with the label system, directly with the three red, yellow, green symbols. For an Italian it would be really easy and immediate to understand the classification as it would be identical to that used in TV, also because for the series broadcast only on TV (es. Rai, Mediaset) it is the only system indicated.

Thank you ;)

Hi, are you able to add the New Zealand rating system to this website? Your Wikipedia link has the certifications already. The free to air ones are most likely the best to use.

@Davide4824 said:

Hi, This is the Italian Rating for TELEVISION CONTENT. It is used by TV channels when they have to broadcast both films and TV series. Obviously the classification of the films is based on a censorship visa for the films which is indicated for each film by the authorities in according to the law. Below I have indicated the classification for movie.

In Italy the classification system changes according to the television station that broadcasts the program. But in general two systems are used in Italy. The most used is inspired by traffic lights. It is used for classifications by Rai, Mediaset and in general by all national television broadcasters excluding Sky Italia. It is used for both movies and TV series.

  • 🟢 –> Green label: all ages admitted. Indicates that the vision of a program is generally suitable for everyone since the content inside it is of zero or mild impact (but may not be suitable for very young children).
  • 🟡 –> Yellow label: parental guidance suggested. Warns that for viewing the program we recommend viewing accompanied by an adult because of content with a moderate impact. Generally this warning is valid for children or young people up to the age of 13. The content of programmes with such classification should always be totally suitable for children from the age of 14.
  • đź”´ –> Red label: Only for adults. Warns that viewing a program is generally recommended for an adult audience because of its strong content. A warning will also be shown before airing.

The classifications used by Sky Italia for all its channels (paid or free) are the following:

  • T or PT –> All ages admitted. (T = Tutti = Everyone or PT = Per Tutti = For Everyone)
  • BA –> Parental guidance suggested. (BA = Bambini Accompagnati = Accompanied children)
  • VM12 –> Forbidden for children under 12. (VM = Vietato ai Minori = Prohibited to minors)
  • VM14 –> Forbidden for children under 14.
  • VM18 –> Forbidden for children under 18.

Classification according to law for film (used for example when you go to cinema or buy DVD ecc.) but in general for all video content, is this:

  • T or PT –> All ages admitted.
  • VM6 –> Forbidden for children under 6.
  • VM14 –> Forbidden for children under 14.
  • VM18 –> Forbidden for children under 18.

It would be really fantastic if you could implement it, as indicated by law, together with the label system, directly with the three red, yellow, green symbols. For an Italian it would be really easy and immediate to understand the classification as it would be identical to that used in TV, also because for the series broadcast only on TV (es. Rai, Mediaset) it is the only system indicated.

Thank you ;)

Any possibility to implement italian ratings?

The Wikipedia link has New Zealand, but it isn't supported on the edit page.

Hi!

Any chance you can add Belgian TV certifications? The values are the exact same as for France, but the classification may vary with the one for France.

You can take a look at the official page from the gouvernment : http://www.surveillezlatele.be/rules.php (in french) for confirmation.

Thanks!

Norway is missing. Please add. See Wikipedia article for details: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Television_content_rating_system#Norway

If you could add Argentina as well that would be amazing!!! there is some info about it on the wiki article.

BTW, your api it's just amazing, everything is so organized and consistent. Making a user interface feels so good when you consume hight quality api. Thanks for sharing

Un film, une émission télévisée ou un artiste est introuvable ? Connectez-vous afin de créer une nouvelle fiche.

Général

s Mettre le curseur dans la barre de recherche
p Ouvrir le menu du profil
esc Fermer une fenĂŞtre ouverte
? Ouvrir la fenĂŞtre des raccourcis clavier

Sur les pages des médias

b Retour (ou vers le parent si faisable)
e Afficher la page de modification

Sur les pages des saisons des émissions télévisées

Afficher la saison suivante (flèche droite)
Afficher la saison précédente (flèche gauche)

Sur les pages des épisodes des émissions télévisées

Afficher l'épisode suivant (flèche droite)
Afficher l'épisode précédent (flèche gauche)

Sur toutes les pages des images / photos

a Ouvrir la fenĂŞtre d'ajout d'image / photo

Sur toutes les pages de modifications

t Ouvrir le sélecteur de traduction
ctrl+ s Envoyer le formulaire

Sur les pages des discussions

n Créer une nouvelle discussion
w Basculer le statut de suivi
p Basculer publique / privée
c Basculer fermer / ouvrir
a Ouvrir l'activité
r RĂ©pondre Ă  la discussion
l Afficher la dernière réponse
ctrl+ enter Envoyer votre message
Page suivante (flèche droite)
Page précédente (flèche gauche)

Paramètres

Vous souhaitez évaluer ou ajouter cet élément à une liste ?

Connexion