‘Django Unchained’ dolls banned by eBay

Agence France-Presse

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

'These were removed as they were in violation of our Offensive Materials policy'

RACIST. eBay deems the 'Django Unchained' dolls offensive and bans their sale. Screen grab from YouTube (SanfordWatch)

LOS ANGELES, USA – Online auction giant eBay has banned the sale of dolls linked to Quentin Tarantino’s blood-soaked western about a freed slave “Django Unchained,” describing them as “offensive,” on Thursday.

The toymaker who manufactured the dolls had already discontinued them, after protests from black advocacy groups, according to the celebrity news website TMZ.

READ: Tarantino: Linking Hollywood films to Newtown disrespectful

An eBay spokeswoman, Kari Ramirez, confirmed to AFP that the auction website had banned them. “These were removed as they were in violation of our Offensive Materials policy,” she said.

The eBay policy includes a section listing “racially or ethnically offensive language, historical items, reproductions and works of art and media” which are subject to restricted use or banning from the site.

READ: Guess who: Predicting the new Oscar winners

The banned list notably includes “items marketed inappropriately with an intolerant regard toward religion, sexual orientation, race, or ethnic background.”

“Django Unchained” stars Jamie Foxx as a slave freed by a bounty hunter, with whom he teams up over the winter on a killing spree before seeking to liberate his wife, employed by a plantation owner played by Leonardo DiCaprio.

READ: ‘Django’ wins early Globes, but Spielberg eyes gold

The dolls include reproductions of Foxx’s Django and bounty hunter Dr. Schultz, as well as DiCaprio’s character, and that played by Tarantino regular Samuel L Jackson.

TMZ reported last week that the Weinstein Company, the movie’s producers, had asked the dolls’ manufacturer to stop production after protests from groups including Reverend Al Sharpton’s National Action Network.

It said only about 1,000 of the dolls had been sold before production was shut down.

READ: ‘Les Mis,’ ‘Argo,’ ‘Homeland’ top Golden Globes winners

“Django Unchained” has already triggered controversy, both over its use of violence — hardly a surprise with Tarantino — and its depiction of slavery, with African American director Spike Lee calling it “disrespectful.”

“American slavery was not a Sergio Leone Spaghetti Western. It was a Holocaust. My ancestors are slaves. Stolen from Africa. I will honor them,” he tweeted, referring to the 1966 movie “Django” which Tarantino references.

READ: Live Blog: The 70th Golden Globes

The provocative “Pulp Fiction” director’s latest movie won two Golden Globes earlier this month, and is nominated in 5 categories for the Oscars, which top off Hollywood’s annual awards season on February 24.

Watch the ‘Django Unchained’ trailer here:


– Rappler.com


(“Django Unchained” is showing in the Philippines on March 13)

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!