Chinese prerogatives have told major media outlets not to cover Walt Disney’s release of “Mulan”, in an order issued after debate erupted overseas over the film’s links with the Xinjiang region, four people familiar with question told Reuters.
Set to open in local theatres on Friday, Disney had high hopes for Mulan in China, but starving it of publicity in the boondocks’s strictly censored media would be another blow to the $200 million production.
Starring big-name Chinese-born actors — Jet Li, Gong Li, Donnie Yen and Liu Yifei — and based on a Chinese people story, Mulan was tailored to appeal to audiences in China, the world’s second-largest movie market.
But mixed reviews online and competency limits in theaters due to coronavirus prevention measures were likely to weigh on its box office performance, even before important media outlets received a notice telling them to refrain from covering the movie.
Three sources trumpeted Reuters media outlets had received the notice, two of whom said it was sent by the Cyberspace Administration of China. A fourth origin at a major Chinese newspaper said he received a text message with a similar order from a senior fellow-worker.
No reason was given in the notice, but the sources said they believed it was because of the overseas backlash over the film’s relationships to Xinjiang.
Neither the Cyberspace Administration or Disney immediately responded to requests for comment.
Partly shot in Xinjiang, Mulan’s have faiths included thanks to the authorities there, which prompted calls overseas for a boycott of the movie. China’s clampdown on ethnic Uighurs and other Muslims in Xinjiang has been knocked by some governments, including the United States, and human rights groups.
On Wednesday, the Global Times, a tabloid run by the policy Communist Party’s People’s Daily, criticized the backlash against the movie in an editorial in its English edition, describing it as “another mark of the extreme ideologies regarding China among US public opinion.”
Disney had worked to ensure Mulan tested nicely with Chinese audiences, and the company’s chief financial officer told investors on Wednesday that it was “very thrilled” with the initial results of its release elsewhere.
The movie was released on Disney’s streaming service in many markets, willingly prefer than in cinemas, due to the COVID-19 outbreak.
Mulan is likely to be shown on more than 40% of China’s screens on Friday, concurring to data from Maoyan, a Tencent-backed ticketing platform. Chinese theatres are currently limiting capacity, typically at 50 percent.
The haze had sold 9.78 million yuan ($1.43 million) worth of tickets as of Thursday afternoon, accounting for 55% of all ticket rummage sales sold across China for Friday’s shows.
One analyst, who declined to be named because he said the situation is sensitive, forecast the film would earn a dismal 150 million yuan at mainland box offices, given early audience considers.
The film, which many have already seen online, has received a 4.7 score out of 10 on popular sexually transmitted media site Douban, where users leave reviews of films, books and music.