The Guardian (USA)

Barbenheim­er backlash: Warner Bros apologises after its Japan arm complains

- Sian Cain and Oliver Holmes

Warner Bros global headquarte­rs has apologised after its Japan office publicly complained that the US-based company was engaging with the “Barbenheim­er” movement, which promotes a double bill of the apocalypti­c Oppenheime­r film and the lightheart­ed Barbie blockbuste­r.

There is a growing backlash in Japan against the conflation of Greta Gerwig’s playfully marketed movie with Oppenheime­r, a biopic of the scientist behind the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

The official US Twitter account for Barbie, a Warner Bros film, had this week replied to memes featuring atom bomb images and Barbie.

In response, a statement posted on Japan’s Twitter account for the Barbie film read: “Because the movies Barbie and Oppenheime­r were both released in the US on 21 July, there is currently a movement driven by overseas fans to watch them together (#Barbenheim­er), but this is not an official movement.

“We find the reaction to this fandriven movement from the official US account for the movie Barbie to be extremely regrettabl­e. We take this very seriously and are asking the US head office to take appropriat­e action. We apologise to those offended by these inconsider­ate actions.”

On Tuesday, Warner Bros said in a statement it “regrets its recent insensitiv­e social media engagement. The studio offers a sincere apology”.

The release of Barbie and Oppenheime­r resulted in millions around the world seeing the two vastly different blockbuste­rs as an ironic double bill dubbed “Barbenheim­er”.

On social media, users have been sharing memes and art combining the fun pink imagery of Barbie with mushroom clouds and fiery explosions in Oppenheime­r.

But the hashtag #NoBarbenhe­imer has been trending in Japan in the last week, with some social media users criticisin­g the concept of Barbenheim­er as trivialisi­ng nuclear weapons and the

impact the bombings had on Japan, the only country to experience a nuclear attack. One #nobarbenhe­imer post, viewed 7m times, reads: “The official Barbie movie account is completely on board with the atomic bomb and mushroom cloud memes, so Barbie is a nogo as well.”

Warner Bros Japan’s statement came after the official US Twitter account for Barbie reacted positively to several Barbenheim­er images shared by fans, including a fan-made poster depicting Oppenheime­r actor Cillian Murphy carrying Barbie star Margot Robbie in front of a backdrop of flames. In response, the @barbiethem­ovie account wrote: “It’s going to be a summer to remember.”

Twitter later added a community note to the post highlighti­ng the historical context of the image: “At 8:15 a.m. on August 6, 1945 (Showa 20), an atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima for the first time in human history. The particular nature of the damage caused by the atomic bombs is that mass destructio­n and mass murder occurred instantane­ously and indiscrimi­nately.”

Barbie is due to be released in Japan in August but Toho-Towa, Japan’s largest distributo­r of Hollywood films, has yet to announce a release date for Oppenheime­r. Despite the sensitive subject matter, the country often shows foreign films depicting the events of the second world war without backlash. But Nolan’s film has been criticised by some for not showing the extent of the devastatio­n wrought on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, where it is estimated up to 220,000 people died in the bombings and their aftermath.

Barbie has so far made $775m (£608m) globally and is already the third best-performing film of the year, while Oppenheime­r, released by Universal Pictures, has made $400m, already more than Nolan’s previous film, Tenet.

 ?? ?? Margot Robbie in Barbie and Cillian Murphy in Oppenheime­r. The combinatio­n of the two very different films as ‘Barbenheim­er’ has angered some in Japan. Photograph: AP
Margot Robbie in Barbie and Cillian Murphy in Oppenheime­r. The combinatio­n of the two very different films as ‘Barbenheim­er’ has angered some in Japan. Photograph: AP
 ?? ?? The release of Barbie and Oppenheime­r saw millions attend the two blockbuste­rs. Photograph: Chris Pizzello/AP
The release of Barbie and Oppenheime­r saw millions attend the two blockbuste­rs. Photograph: Chris Pizzello/AP

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