No discussion of British Bombshells 2 - Birds Gone Black -2012- is complete without addressing the regulatory headwinds it faced. The UK’s Video Recordings Act (VRA) of 1984, amended in 2009, gave the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) authority to refuse classification for certain explicit acts. By 2012, the BBFC had become increasingly strict on material deemed “potentially harmful.”
The final track’s techno beat, accompanied by the polluted‑river field recording, signifies a post‑human soundscape where nature is filtered through circuitry—a hallmark of the cyber‑ecology concept. British Bombshells 2 - Birds Gone Black -2012-