Vietnam bans Barbie movie over disputed South China Sea map

Censors pull film because of scenes showing China’s ‘nine-dash line’ under which it claims almost the entire South China Sea.

Margot Robbie smiling as she appears at an event in Seoul. She is wearing a pink suit with a white lapel and a white wide brimmed hat with a pink ribbon.
Australian actress Margot Robbie at an event promoting the Barbie film in Seoul [Jung Yeon-je/AFP]

Vietnam has banned the soon-to-be-released Barbie film because it includes a map depicting China’s “nine-dash line” claim over the South China Sea.

The film, inspired by the plastic doll and starring Australian actress Margot Robbie, was due to start screening in Vietnamese cinemas on July 21, the same day as its release in the United States.

Vi Kien Thanh, head of the Vietnam Cinema Department, confirmed the ban to the state-run Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper on Monday, referencing the map’s appearance in certain scenes.

Beijing bases its claim to almost the entire South China Sea on the nine-dash line, a U-shaped line taking in nearly all of the resource-rich waters, which an international court found in 2016 to have no legal basis.

Vietnam also claims part of the sea along with other littoral states including the Philippines, which brought the court action, and Malaysia.

It is not the first time Hanoi has taken action against films over China’s expansive claim. Last year, it banned the Tom Holland film Uncharted and in 2019, the animated movie Abominable was pulled from screens after the discovery of scenes showing the map.

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Barbie is one of this year’s most eagerly anticipated films and also stars Ryan Gosling as Barbie’s boyfriend Ken. It is directed by Greta Gerwig.

Source: Al Jazeera

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