Screenings of Winnie the Pooh horror film cancelled in Hong Kong

The screening of Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey, a British slasher film due to be released in Hong Kong this week, has been cancelled for technical reasons, movie websites said.

Moviematic, which had organised a screening of the film for Tuesday evening, reported the cancellation on its social media pages. Several other websites and media also reported the cancellation of screenings.

The movie’s distributor in Hong Kong, VII Pillars Entertainment, did not immediately respond to requests for comment. A ticket-booking link on its Facebook page brought up a message saying ticketing was temporarily unavailable.

Chinese censors have in the past targeted the film’s main character, originally conceptualised by the English author AA Milne, due to memes that compare the bumbling bear to President Xi Jinping.

The comparisons began in 2013 when Xi visited the US and met his then counterpart, Barack Obama, and some online commentators seized on their likeness to Pooh and Tigger.

Some people have used the image of Pooh to signal dissent.

A demonstrator carrying a Winnie the Pooh bear with a portrait of Chinese president, Xi Jinping, on its face and holding a ‘Free Hong Kong’ sign at an Apect protest in Bangkok, Thailand, in 2022.
A demonstrator carrying a Winnie the Pooh bear with a portrait of Chinese president, Xi Jinping, on its face and holding a ‘Free Hong Kong’ sign at an Apect protest in Bangkok, Thailand, in 2022. Photograph: Jorge Silva/Reuters

Hong Kong’s government did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

A new censorship law in Hong Kong came into effect in 2021, barring bars films that “endorse, support, glorify, encourage and incite activities that might endanger national security”. Some films have been prevented from being shown in the Chinese special administrative region.

Beijing imposed a national security law on Hong Kong in 2020 after the city was rocked by anti-government protests. The law sets out punishments for anything deemed to be subversion, secession, colluding with foreign forces and terrorism.

Two films were dropped from Hong Kong’s international film festival last year after failing to get approval from authorities.

The cancellation comes as Hong Kong hosts the Art Basel contemporary art fair, with authorities keen to promote the city as a cultural hub.

The Guardian

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