Moviegoers may be surprised to learn that the forthcoming “Barbie”—a movie based on the popular children’s doll toy franchise—has been banned in Vietnam over its depiction of an international maritime dispute with the People’s Republic of China (PRC).
The PRC—a single-party state controlled by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)—has asserted maritime rights to much of the South China Sea with a map commonly featuring nine dashes. The PRC and communist Vietnam are two of several nations surrounding the South China Sea that have asserted overlapping claims to the body of water.
Vi Kien Thanh, the head of the Vietnamese government’s Department of Cinema, told Tuoi Tre News that his department’s Central Council of Feature Film Evaluation and Classification blocked a license for “Barbie” to be screened in Vietnamese cinemas. Tuoi Tre News reported the ban has prompted managers of cinema chains across the country, such as Galaxy and CGV, to cancel screenings of the film.
It’s unclear the context in which this controversial “nine-dash line” depiction is shown in the Barbie movie. NTD News reached out to Warner Bros. Pictures—the film’s distributor—for comment, but did not receive a response by the time this article was published.
The Vietnamese government also requested Netflix remove episodes of its spy drama series “Pine Gap” in 2021 for including the “nine-dash line.” The series, produced in Australia, depicts an Australian-American joint defense intelligence team against the backdrop of rising geopolitical tensions with the PRC over the South China Sea.