The Boston Globe

‘Barbenheim­er’ not funny in nuclear-scarred Japan

Online mashups of hit movies are met with anger

- By Ben Dooley and Hisako Ueno

TOKYO — To Americans eager for signs of life in an ailing cinema culture, the simultaneo­us box office success of the “Barbie” movie and the biopic “Oppenheime­r” has been cause for celebratio­n, with filmgoers embracing the jarring juxtaposit­ion of the two very different blockbuste­rs.

In Japan, however, this jubilant fusion, including “Barbenheim­er” double features and online mashups of Barbie’s pink fantasia with images of Oppenheime­r-era nuclear explosions, have been met with a very different response: anger.

For days, Twitter users in Japan, where nuclear bombings by the US military during World War II killed hundreds of thousands of people in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, have been spreading the hashtag #NoBarbenhe­imer.

And on Monday, the backlash ignited a rare display of internal Hollywood corporate discord, as the Japanese subsidiary of Warner Bros. criticized its headquarte­rs’ handling of social media for the “Barbie” movie.

In a letter posted to the official Japan account for “Barbie,” which will be released in Japanese theaters Aug. 11, the Japan subsidiary lamented its US counterpar­ts’ promotion of Barbenheim­er memes as “highly regrettabl­e.”

In one such instance, the official “Barbie” movie account responded to a fan-made image depicting Barbie with an atomic bomb bouffant with the comment, “This Ken is a stylist.”

In another, it replied with a kissy-face emoji to a movie poster showing Barbie and J. Robert Oppenheime­r, the father of the atomic bomb, against the backdrop of a nuclear explosion. “It’s going to be a summer to remember,” the studio’s tweet said.

Some Japanese Twitter users responded with photos of the bombing victims.

Others said that they had canceled their plans to see the movie.

“Nuclear weapons aren’t cool,” one user wrote in reply to a tweet promoting the movie.

Barbenheim­er, the Japanese Warner Bros. subsidiary noted, “is not an official activity” of Warner Bros., and it said it had demanded that the company’s headquarte­rs take “appropriat­e action.”

By Tuesday afternoon, the post had nearly 30 million views and tens of thousands of retweets. Many users added a hashtag in Japanese, #BarbieNoKe­n, a play on words that translates to “The Barbie Incident.”

In a statement Tuesday, the Warner Bros. headquarte­rs said it “regrets its recent insensitiv­e social media engagement” and offers “a sincere apology.”

The “Barbie” movie account’s replies to Barbenheim­er posts have since been removed.

While the “Barbie” movie will be released in Japanese theaters days before the 78th anniversar­y of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings, “Oppenheime­r,” a Universal Pictures film, has not yet received a release date in Japan.

That has led to some speculatio­n that the movie may not be shown at all in Japan, to avoid offending local sensibilit­ies over the legacy of the nuclear attacks. In response to a question from The New York Times, Universal said it was not aware of the Barbenheim­er controvers­y.

An official ban seems unlikely: Japan has robust freedom of speech, and previous US movies touching on war-era subjects have played to modest audiences in the country.

That includes the 1996 film “Infinity,” about a scientist involved in the Manhattan Project, which was led by Oppenheime­r and gave birth to atomic weapons.

It’s also not unusual for foreign films to debut in Japan well after their releases at home. “Infinity” took nearly two years to make it to Japanese cinemas.

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