Warner Bros has apologised for replying to tweets in regards to the “Barbenheimer” craze that used photos from the Hiroshma and Nagasaki atomic bombings.
The memes in regards to the two movies triggered criticisms in Japan for what many described as minimising the assaults.
The Barbie film, in regards to the doll, and Universal Pictures’ Oppenheimer, a biography of Robert Oppenheimer who helped develop the weapon, had been each launched on July 21 within the UK and US, sparking the Barbenheimer craze for watching each on the identical day.
Some of the pictures, which weren’t created by Warner Bros, confirmed actress Margot Robbie, who portrays Barbie, sitting on the shoulders of Oppenheimer, performed by Cillian Murphy, with an orange inferno of an atomic blast within the background.
The official Barbie account wrote on Twitter, now rebranded as X, in response to the meme: “It’s going to be a summer to remember.”
Replying to a different exhibiting Ms Robbie’s hair changed with an obvious mushroom cloud, the account commented: “This Ken is a stylist” – referring to Barbie’s boyfriend.
In Japan, the one nation to have suffered atomic assaults, the posts drew criticism for what was perceived as belittling remarks in regards to the bombings.
It led to the hashtag #NoBarbenheimertrending on Twitter.
“We apologise to those who felt uncomfortable because of these reactions,” Warner Bros Japan wrote on the social media web site.
The US dropped the world’s first atomic bomb on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945, destroying the town and killing 140,000 folks.
It dropped the second three days afterward Nagasaki, through which one other 70,000 died. Japan surrendered on August 15, ending the Second World War.
Warner Bros Japan mentioned Barbenheimer was not a part of an official firm marketing campaign.
It added that the response of its father or mother agency’s Barbie account to some memes lacked sensitivity.
“We believe it was extremely regrettable,” the Japanese distributor mentioned.
Barbie’s launch is scheduled for August 11 within the nation. It was solely the newest controversy for the movie, which was banned in Vietnam.
The nation mentioned the film included a picture of a map exhibiting waters within the South China Sea as belonging to China – which is disputed by Vietnam. Warner Bros mentioned the map was nothing greater than a “child-like crayon drawing”.
Source: www.perthnow.com.au