Hong Kong protesters call for boycott of Disney's 'Mulan' remake

Authored by edition.cnn.com and submitted by netok
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Liu Yifei, the Chinese-born actress starring in Disney's upcoming live-action "Mulan" remake, waded into the Hong Kong protest controversy on Thursday by expressing support for the city's police, who anti-government demonstrators accuse of using excessive force to quell unrest.

"I support the Hong Kong police. You can all attack me now. What a shame for Hong Kong," she posted on Weibo , a Twitter-like Chinese social media platform.

Immediately, people began posting #BoycottMulan on Twitter -- which is banned in China. Hours later, the hashtag was trending in Hong Kong and the United States with 37,700 tweets posted at time of writing. Twitter users accused the actress of supporting police brutality, and called out the fact that she's an American citizen.

"Liu is a naturalized American citizen. It must be nice. Meanwhile she pisses on people fighting for democracy," one person tweeted

Yifei Liu stars as Mulan in the live-action remake of the classic Disney film.

On the flip side, she also received plenty of praise on Weibo, the dominant platform in China. Nearly all the comments on her post echoed support for the Hong Kong police and Beijing.

"Believe in the government, believe in the Chinese central (government), believe in the country," one comment wrote

The protests, which began in June as largely peaceful mass demonstrations against a now-suspended extradition bill , have morphed into something much darker and more violent, with frequent clashes between protesters and police.

Liu isn't the only Chinese celebrity who's weighed in -- Jackie Chan, martial arts film icon and native Hong Konger, called for peace on Thursday in an interview with China's broadcaster CCTV. He, too, was blasted on Twitter for the nationalist tone of his message -- at one point, he says in Mandarin, "I feel the pride of being a Chinese everywhere. The five-starred red flag is respected everywhere."

Other public figures, actors and singers like Tony Leung Ka-fai and Daniel Chan have spoken out against protester violence and vandalism. Pop star Denise Ho came out in strong support of the protesters -- she even gave a speech about the protests at a United Nations meeting last month.

Celebrities outside of Hong Kong and China have also chimed in. Kim Eui Sung, a South Korean actor who starred in the cult 2016 zombie apocalypse film "Train to Busan," expressed support for the protesters on Instagram, writing, "We are watching you, praying for you. #freehongkong." After being bombarded with critical and pro-Beijing comments, he posted another photo -- the infamous Tank Man shot from the Tiananmen Square massacre.

Sports drinks brand Pocari Sweat was also cheered by protesters and boycotted by the opposition after the company pulled ads from a local broadcaster perceived as pro-Beijing. Even bubble tea has been caught in the mix, with a Taiwanese chain urging solidarity with protesters.

And with the unrest showing no end in sight, both sides are settling in for the long haul.

"So disappointed," said one Twitter user of Liu's Weibo post. "Was so excited for Mulan too."

TRS0L on August 16th, 2019 at 12:46 UTC »

Something weird I've seen is that, if you go to any mainland China news Twitter or post defending mainland China almost all retweets and comments (usually using this copypasta:π™ƒπ™€π™£π™œ π™†π™€π™£π™œ π™žπ™¨ π™₯𝙖𝙧𝙩 𝙀𝙛 π˜Ύπ™π™žπ™£π™– π™›π™€π™§π™šπ™«π™šπ™§πŸ‡¨πŸ‡³ or alike) are from accounts made this summer and that have never commented nor retweeted anything else.

There are also some that are old accounts but were suspiciously inactive untill last week or that have been propaganda machines since the start.

All of this seems very suspicious and I can only hope the best for Hong Kong

Luke5119 on August 16th, 2019 at 12:00 UTC »

Right now a group of execs at Disney are playing damage control. I can just picture them reading the first story about this and softly going "....fuck".

DieselbloodDoc on August 16th, 2019 at 11:47 UTC »

There is no war in Ba Sing Se