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[h=1]Thailand bans Macbeth film Shakespeare Must Die[/h]Film's director Ing Kanjanavanit says censors objected to movie's anti-monarchy overtones and charged political content

Thai-film-director-Ing-Ka-008.jpgThai film director Ing Kanjanavanit with the DVD cover of Shakespeare Must Die, her adaption of Macbeth which has been banned by the country's censors. Photograph: Sakchai Lalit/AP

Thailand's film censors have banned an adaptation of Shakespeare's Macbeth, saying it could inflame political passions in a country where it is taboo to criticise the monarchy.

The Thai-language film Shakespeare Must Die tells the story of a theatre group in a fictional country resembling Thailand that is staging a production of Macbeth, in which an ambitious general murders his way to the Scottish throne.

One of the film's main characters is a dictator named Dear Leader, who bears a resemblance to former Thai leader Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted in a 2006 coup which sparked years of political turmoil between his supporters and critics.

Censors at the culture ministry issued a brief statement saying that the film could not be distributed in Thailand because it "has content that causes divisiveness among the people of the nation". It did not specify which scenes were deemed offensive.

But, Ing Kanjanavanit, the film's director, said the censorship committee objected to anti-monarchy overtones in the film as well as politically charged content, including a scene based on a photograph from Bangkok's 1976 student uprising showing a demonstrator being lynched.

"The committee questioned why we wanted to bring back violent pain from the past to make people angry," Ing said in an interview on Wednesday. The censors also disliked the attire of a murderer in the film, who wore a bright red hooded cloak – the same colour worn by the pro-Thaksin demonstrators known as the Red Shirts.

The director called the ruling absurd and a reflection of the fear in Thai society.

"I feel like we are heading to a very dark, dark place right now, a place full of fears and everyone has to be extra careful about what they say," she said, adding that the character resembling Thaksin could represent any leader accused of corruption and abuse of power.

"When Cambodians watch this they'll think it's Hun Sen. When Libyans watch it they would think it's Gaddafi."

Sensitivity over criticism of the monarchy has increased in recent years as the poor health of the country's 84-year-old King Bhumibol Adulyadej has raised concerns about a smooth succession. At the same time, sharp partisan political battles in the wake of the 2006 coup have unleashed unprecedented questioning of established institutions, including the palace.

Last year, the film board banned a movie about a transgender father struggling to raise two children, called Insects in the Backyard, saying it contained scenes that were immoral and pornographic.

Ing said she planned to appeal against the ban.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/apr/04/thailand-bans-macbeth-film

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