Lithuanian cinemas boycott new Hayao Miyazaki movie over ‘Russia links’ – media

Lithuania’s cinemas have announced that they will not show the latest Hayao Miyazaki movie over its distributor’s alleged links to Russia Read Full Article at RT.com

Lithuanian cinemas boycott new Hayao Miyazaki movie over ‘Russia links’ – media

The Baltic state’s theaters claimed that the film’s distribution company is tied to Moscow

Every single cinema in Lithuania will boycott the latest anime film from legendary Japanese director Hayao Miyazaki over its distribution firm’s spurious links to Russia, Lithuanian news outlet LRT reported on Thursday.

The final film of Miyazaki’s six-decade career, ‘The Boy and the Heron’, was due to hit theaters in Lithuania before the end of the year, until the country’s cinema operators and theater distributors released a statement on Thursday announcing its cancellation.

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According to the statement, the cinemas and distributors discovered that the company that owns the distribution rights to the film in the Baltic region – an Estonian firm named Artgene – is “linked to Russia.” The statement did not elaborate on this alleged link, but nevertheless announced that the movie would not be shown in any Lithuanian cinemas.

“The Lithuanian film community calls on the other Baltic countries to react to this information and Russia’s potentially harmful actions to the Baltic economy and the film industry, and also to prevent the aggressor state from doing business,” the statement added.

Bizarrely, the statement claimed that Artgene threatened that the country of Lithuania “would be publicly slandered in the world for sabotaging the film.” No evidence was provided for this claim.

The decision is not unusual for Lithuania, whose government has been one of the staunchest backers of Ukraine on the world stage. As Lithuanian Foreign Minister Gabrielius Landsbergis pushed his Western allies for more sanctions and military aid to Kiev earlier this year, Culture Minister Simonas Kairys announced a “mental quarantine” on Russian culture, art, and media.