The Russian distributor of Power Rangers has given the film an 18+ rating after criticism from several legislators who complained about the film’s inclusion of a LGBT character.

WDSSPR, the Russian distributor of Power Rangers, informed cinemas on Friday that the film would have the highest possible age restrictions after the hardline legislator Vitaly Milonov suggested it should be banned.

Milonov singled out the film’s director, Dean Israelite, and compared the film to fascist ideology. “If fascist ideology is banned in our country, then [movies by] the likes of Dean Israelite should be banned first thing,” he said, according to the Hollywood Reporter.

Another legislator, Alexei Zhuravlev, said the film amounted to “gay propaganda” while speaking on the conservative television network Tsargrad, and criticised staff at the culture ministry for not being stricter on the film.

“Some officials don’t want to observe laws adopted by the state duma [lower chamber of Russian parliament], specifically the law banning gay propaganda among minors,” he said, according to the Hollywood Reporter.

The move follows a similar high rating for Beauty and the Beast, a film which was also criticised by Milonov, a St Petersburg lawmaker who has risen to prominence due to his stance against “gay propaganda”. Milonov said the film’s release in Russia should be canceled because, according to him, it promoted “perverted sexual relations”.



He was given a medal of the order “For Service to the Fatherland” in the second degree in 2015, and in 2012 was the architect of the controversial St Petersburg law banning the “propaganda of homosexuality and paedophilia among minors”.

Power Rangers features the yellow ranger, played by Becky G, who questions her sexuality. In the US, the film received a PG-13 rating, which means some material may be inappropriate for children younger than 13.

In the US this weekend, both films are set to dominate the box office with Power Rangers expected to make $40m and Beauty and the Beast a predicted $85m, which would give it the fourth-best second weekend of all time in north America.