Manila bans Hollywood action movie over S. China Sea map
Sign up now: Get insights on Asia's fast-moving developments
DeeperDive is a beta AI feature. Refer to full articles for the facts.
MANILA • The Philippines has pulled the plug on all domestic screenings of a Hollywood film called Uncharted, over a scene showing a disputed map of the South China Sea, the Foreign Ministry said yesterday.
The move comes shortly after Vietnam, another claimant in the South China Sea, also banned the same Sony Pictures action movie which stars Tom Holland and Mark Wahlberg.
A two-second frame in the movie, released in the Philippines on Feb 23, has an image of the so-called nine-dash line marking China's claims in the South China Sea, a strategic waterway.
The scene "is contrary to national interest", the Philippines' Foreign Ministry said in a statement.
The U-shaped line is a feature used on Chinese maps to illustrate its maritime territory in a region where Taiwan, Vietnam, Brunei, and Malaysia, the Philippines all have competing claims.
A 2016 ruling by an arbitration tribunal in The Hague invalidated China's claims to almost the entire waterway through which about US$3 trillion (S$4.1 trillion) worth of trade passes annually.
Beijing did not participate in the court proceedings and does not recognise the ruling.
Sony's Columbia Pictures Industries was ordered to stop screening the film and has complied, Manila said. Sony Pictures did not respond to an e-mailed request for comment.
In 2019, the Philippines' Foreign Ministry requested DreamWorks to shut down cinema screenings of the animated film Abominable after a scene showed the same Chinese nine-dash line.
REUTERS


