China's Tencent restores Fight Club ending after backlash
Chinese streaming giant Tencent has reinstated the original ending of a Hollywood movie after a censored version last month sparked backlash.
The original ending to the 1999 film Fight Club, starring Brad Pitt, shows scenes of explosions and relentless fighting. But China's version simply showed a message on screen saying the authorities won and saved the day.
The change ignited intense debate about cinematic censorship in China.
Warning: There are plot spoilers ahead.
The latest version on Tencent reportedly restores about 11 of the 12 minutes that were cut. According to news site SCMP, the scenes still missing are those featuring nudity.
The cult classic, directed by David Fincher, stars Edward Norton as the narrator and Brad Pitt as his imaginary alter ego, Tyler Durden.
The film's original finale shows Fincher's character killing his alter ego, before bombs destroy buildings in a subversive plot to reorder society.
China's version of the film, which was only released last month, cut all those scenes, and instead explained that the police foiled the plot, arrested the criminals and sent Durden to a "lunatic asylum".
"Through the clue provided by Tyler, the police rapidly figured out the whole plan and arrested all criminals, successfully preventing the bomb from exploding," it said.
The censored ending was ridiculed online and criticised by both human rights groups and Chinese viewers who had previously seen pirated versions of the original.
Human Rights Watch described the changes as "dystopian".
Chuck Palahniuk, who wrote the 1996 novel that Fight Club was adapted from, wrote sarcastically on Twitter: "This is SUPER wonderful! Everyone gets a happy ending in China!"
The author also wrote on the online platform, Substack: "How amazing. I'd no idea! Justice always wins. Nothing ever exploded. Fini."
It is not uncommon for Chinese broadcasters to censor anything that may be deemed politically or culturally sensitive.
Last year's Friends: The Reunion special saw several cuts being made by Chinese censors, including scenes with Lady Gaga. The pop star's repertoire was banned from mainland China after she met the Dalai Lama in June, who is considered a separatist by Chinese authorities.
However, it is less common for them to change an ending, and rarer still to see those cuts reversed.
No comments