You won’t BELIEVE which BANNED Oscar-winning classic is releasing in China after 18 years
CHINESE cinemas are set to release previously banned Oscar-winning Japanese anime classic Spirited Away after 18 years.
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Back in 2003, Studio Ghibli’s Hayao Miyazaki won the Best Animated Feature Oscar for Spirited Away. Released in Japan two years earlier, the anime about a young girl who enters the spirit world is still the highest-grossing movie of all time in its home country. The animated classic grossed ¥30.8 billion, topping Titanic, Frozen and Your Name. While three years ago the BBC polled film critics around the world to choose the 100 greatest films of the 21st century and Spirited Away came fourth.
Now, after an 18-year ban, China is finally releasing Spirited Away in Chinese cinemas on June 21, according to The Hollywood Reporter.
This follows the first time release of Miyazaki’s other classic My Neighbour Totoro in China last year.
Released in 1988, the film made $26 million in this run with Spirited Away expected to top this.
It’s widely known that the Japanese director has many fans in China who watch his films via pirated DVDs and downloads.
China has a strict government approval process for foreign films.
As for why Spirited Away was banned in the first place, it may have something to do with previous tensions in Sino-Japanese relations which have thawed in recent years.
Another reason could be the spiritual content of Spirited Away, since China’s official regulator prohibits films that “promote cults or superstition” because such ideas are not compatible with the ruling Communist Party’s atheistic secularism.
This resulted in the female-led Ghostbusters reboot being banned in China.
Ghostbusters’ producers knew something was up when the Chinese character for “ghost” was removed from the title, even though it’s there for the original films.
Movies like 2006’s Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man’s Chest suffered a similar fate to Ghostbusters for such supernatural scenes and cannibalism.
However, lifting the ban on Spirited Away could be a sign of a more liberal view to cinema in China going forward.