New Spider-Man film will not screen in UAE, as region debates values
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[June 16, 2023]
By Yousef Saba and Lisa Barrington
DUBAI (Reuters) - The United Arab Emirates will not screen Sony's
"Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse", Vox Cinemas said on Thursday
without explanation, amid debate online and among regional movie fans
about the animated film's treatment of transgender themes.
The film, a sequel to 2018's Oscar-winning "Spider-Man: Into the
Spider-Verse", was released on June 2 in the United States and was set
for a June 22 release in the Gulf region.
However Vox, a subsidiary of retail conglomerate Majid Al Futtaim, said
in response to a query via Facebook Messenger that the movie would not
be released in the UAE. Majid Al Futaim did not respond to a request for
comment.
Major cinema chains in Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, Oman and Bahrain do
not list the movie on their websites' "coming soon" sections, including
Vox, Novo, and Reel cinemas.
The film has sparked debate online about whether the character Gwen
Stacy is trans, and a scene in a trailer shows a sign in the background
that reads "protect trans kids".
Reuters could not determine if that was the reason the film was pulled.
The UAE Media Council on Monday said on Twitter it "will not allow the
circulation or publication of content contrary to the values and
principles of the UAE and the standards of media content in force in the
country." The Council gave no further details or referred to any
specific content.
In the socially conservative Middle East, any deviation from traditional
sexual norms is considered taboo and in many countries it is a criminal
offence.
"I'm with the directive of not showing this movie. We don't want to show
the next generation that this is something normal. It's not normal, our
religion told us that there's only male and female genders," Abdullah
Al-Oufi, a Saudi, told Reuters in Riyadh.
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Cast member Shameik Moore attends a
photo call for Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse, in Beverly
Hills, California, U.S. May 22, 2023. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni/File
Photo
"I see that the decision of stopping
the movie is a sovereign decision, and it's our right to express our
opinion," said Sami al-Shoraim, a young Saudi in Riyadh, adding that
movies should respect their viewers' values.
Vox, which operates across the Gulf, had said in a Facebook post on
Sunday that tickets were now available ahead of release. However,
tickets on Thursday were not shown as available for purchase on
Vox's websites for Gulf countries.
Several cinema customer service lines did not say why the film was
not listed and government bodies in the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar
did not immediately respond to requests for comment. Kuwait's
information ministry said it had not yet received the film for
consideration.
In June 2022 the UAE banned Walt Disney-Pixar's animated feature
film "Lightyear" from screening because it features characters in a
same-sex relationship. The youth and culture ministry said it
"violated the nation's media content standard".
(Reporting by Yousef Saba and Lisa Barrington in Dubai, Andrew Mills
in Doha, Nafisa Eltahir in Cairo and Mohammed Benmansour in Riyadh,
Editing by William Maclean)
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