"Barbie" Movie Enters South China Sea Dispute

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Freightdog
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Re: "Barbie" Movie Enters South China Sea Dispute

Post by Freightdog »

violet wrote: Tue Jul 18, 2023 11:40 pm
johnny lightning wrote: Tue Jul 18, 2023 6:48 am Am I the only one who thinks that this movie not being shown (in any country!) is GOOD thing? The fact that this garbage was actually even considered for production is mind boggling. Last movie I can recall watching in a theatre was Iron Man, which I quite liked. A hundred comic book movies later and I still don't have any desire to see another.
I’m going to watch it and hope to laugh.
I’ll pass. I’ll be awaiting Oppenheimer. I wonder if that will do the rounds of the PRC cinemas?
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Re: "Barbie" Movie Enters South China Sea Dispute

Post by Jerry Atrick »

johnny lightning wrote: Tue Jul 18, 2023 6:48 am Am I the only one who thinks that this movie not being shown (in any country!) is GOOD thing? The fact that this garbage was actually even considered for production is mind boggling. Last movie I can recall watching in a theatre was Iron Man, which I quite liked. A hundred comic book movies later and I still don't have any desire to see another.
It's pretty decent according to most reviews

You should take a trip to see Barbie

It might change your life
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Re: "Barbie" Movie Enters South China Sea Dispute

Post by CEOCambodiaNews »

Barbie Sails Into Rough Seas – Analysis
July 23, 2023
By Observer Research Foundation

Early in July, in the middle of energetic global promotions, Hanoi banned the Barbie movie, slated for premiering on 21 July because of a scene featuring a map showing the contentious nine-dash line in the South China Sea. Objections to the map were raised by the Philippines, Brunei, and Taiwan as well.

While Manila finally decided to allow screenings with the map being blurred in the scene in question after a board constituted to look into the matter decided that it was a “cartoonish map”, Hanoi banned the movie altogether. The producers, Warner Bros. commented that the map was a child-like drawing with no intended significance.

Barbie is not the first instance of Hollywood productions landing in geopolitical hot water over the incorrect depiction of the South China Sea region. In 2022, the action-adventure film Uncharted was banned in Vietnam, and in 2021, Netflix pulled down two episodes from the Australian spy drama series Pine Gap after objections from Hanoi and Manila. The 2019 movie Abominable was also not screened in Vietnam for showing the contentious map. While the map shown in the scene is by itself indeed ‘cartoonish’ with distorted shapes barely resembling countries, the depiction of the nine-dash line even on such a map is at once both meaningless as well as disturbing. Soon after the announcement of Vietnam’s ban, Chinese social media erupted in celebration of what was being acknowledged as Warner Bros.’s decision to include the nine-dash line.

Storytelling as a form of strategic messaging
Wrongful legitimisation of misrepresented sovereignty through visual entertainment is as much a geopolitical issue as Chinese fishing boats sailing into the sovereign territory of Vietnam or the Philippines even if it is shorn of traditional security implications.

In recent years, several movies and TV shows have encountered significant controversies and faced repercussions for using the contentious nine-dash line map of the South China Sea. The nine-dash line is a demarcation line used by China to claim vast territorial rights over almost the entire South China Sea. This claim is disputed by several countries in the region, including Vietnam, the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei, and Taiwan, leading to political sensitivities and tensions. Beijing has systematically and aggressively made maritime territorial advances that are in direct contravention of maritime territorial limits as set by the UNCLOS, and disregarded the ruling of the Permanent Court of Arbitration which upheld sovereign rights of the Philippines over the extent of its maritime area in the South China Sea and published maps which show the entirety of the South China Sea as its own territory delimited by the nine-dash line.

What is definitely strange is that China’s cartographic version of the South China Sea appears to be the only version that many producers use despite repeated objections. Complaints regarding depictions of the nine-dash line in the South China Sea draw from the established tenets of international law and the rules-based order and are not solely of a moral, cultural, or religious nature which most objections to performing arts tend to generally be.

The objections are valid because despite these being only movies and TV shows with little to no apparent relation with geostrategic imperatives, the use of the nine-dash line has been seen as endorsing China’s territorial claims over the South China Sea, in direct contradiction to the claims of other countries in the region and most importantly, international maritime law. Repeated instances of the use of a particular cartographic version can therefore be perceived as endorsing or legitimising a particular geopolitical stance. Maps are vital tools for establishing sovereign territorial delimitations. And this is why Vietnam’s objections and complaints raised by other countries are not only valid but also must be done as many times as the instances of infringement.

Indebted to China
Till 2022, China had for some years been the biggest box office market by revenue globally and was overtaken by the US only recently in 2023. For Warner Bros., Dreamworks, Sony, and many other US production houses therefore China is a huge market. But in addition to being a lucrative market for visual entertainment, China has, for years, been decision-making in Hollywood by offering to finance and even buy theatre chains in the country. And as these production houses rely more and more on China to make money, it is not surprising that China is too big to ignore. But what is really alarming is the extent to which China has been able to bend, reshape and dictate terms to suit the worldview that it wants to project.

For Beijing, everything is political. When it comes to questions of sovereignty, it is natural for almost every country to be political. But where China differs from other countries is that doing business with China comes at a huge cost and often that cost goes beyond numbers. There are several instances of Beijing punishing studios for productions with content that go against what the Chinese Communist Party want their viewers to see and even changing entire scripts to portray the country not as a dictatorship but as a benevolent one. Despite having been dethroned as the number one box office market this year, it is still the second-largest one and will continue to have sway over what is shown and how it is shown. Maps showing the nine-dash line, therefore, are not significant enough at all to take cognisance of. Barbie will not be the last production to contain China’s version of political, cultural, and strategic messaging.

About the author: Pratnashree Basu is an Associate Fellow at Observer Research Foundation

Source: This article was published by Observer Research Foundation
https://www.eurasiareview.com/23072023- ... -analysis/
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Re: "Barbie" Movie Enters South China Sea Dispute

Post by newsgatherer »

I finally got to watch it at a friends house and thought it was a mix of toe-crumbling narcissism and plenty of laughable moments. The scenography was innovative and pleasing to the eyes. It's quite thoughtful in many ways, which makes me think it would help to better understand the female perspectives of this post modern world.

Forget pink plastic and endless career options. America Ferrera delivers a monologue that cuts deeper than a stiletto heel. It's a millennial indictment of the whole societal pressure cooker we're all simmering in.

Ferrera's not just venting about the impossible beauty standards for women (though, let's be honest, those are brutal). This is about the relentless performance we all put on, constantly striving for some unattainable ideal self. We're all stuck in a SoulCycle class of self-improvement, desperately trying to keep up with the flawless personas everyone seems to be projecting on Instagram.

The pressure isn't just on women, either. Dudes are expected to be emotionless breadwinners with washboard abs, which is frankly exhausting. Forget authenticity, it's all about maintaining the facade.

This isn't some bygone era of etiquette manuals. Social media has turned the whole thing into a nightmarish reality show. We're bombarded with airbrushed images and carefully crafted online narratives, making everyone feel like they're constantly falling short. Hello, narcissistic breakdown!

But Ferrera's monologue isn't just a rant. It's a call to arms. Let's ditch the performance anxiety and embrace empathy. Maybe if we celebrate our individuality and weird quirks a little more, we can all stop trying to be the star of someone else's highlight reel. Now that's a concept truly worth playing with.

Anyway, I had to take a few breaks and was sort of drawn away towards the end, where everyone suddenly understands each other. This is purely Hollywood speculation IMHO.
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