Has a diplomatic feud prompted China to press pause on Japanese film and music?
A diplomatic dispute between China and Japan appears to have impacted the cultural sector, with an apparent unofficial boycott of Japanese film, music, and books. While China has imposed official restrictions on tourism and trade with Japan since November, there has been no formal ban on cultural imports.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedA diplomatic dispute between China and Japan appears to have impacted the cultural sector, with an apparent unofficial boycott of Japanese film, music, and books. While China has imposed official restrictions on tourism and trade with Japan since November, there has been no formal ban on cultural imports. Notably, the Shanghai International Film Festival, starting this Friday, will not feature any Japanese films, marking the first time in two decades. This follows a similar omission of Japanese movies at the Beijing International Film Festival in April. Both festivals had previously included Japanese films as part of a consistent exchange program since 2006, even through past diplomatic tensions and the pandemic.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedAn arts worker in Shanghai stated that the absence of Japanese films was 'not entirely surprising'.
The Beijing International Film Festival, held in April, also dropped its program of Japanese movies.
The Shanghai International Film Festival does not have any Japanese films on its line-up for the first time in 20 years.
China has imposed official restrictions on tourism and trade with Japan since November.
A diplomatic feud between Beijing and Tokyo appears to have led to an unofficial boycott on Japanese film, music, and books.