Culture

Here’s Why People Are Extremely Angry At The New ‘Peter Rabbit’ Film

People are also not happy that the rabbit twerks.

peter rabbit

Want more Junkee in your life? Sign up to our newsletter, and follow us on Instagram and Facebook so you always know where to find us.

The new Peter Rabbit film has been in cinemas for less than a week, and it’s already facing a furious boycott over a scene where a group of rabbits pelt a man with blackberries.

Parents of kids with food allergies are calling the scene “allergy bullying”, because the rabbits deliberately target said man’s blackberry allergy, causing him to have an allergic reaction and use his epi-pen. There’s apparently also a scene where the rabbits make light of allergies, and hoo boy, parents are mad.

In an open letter to the makers of the film, allergy advocacy group Kids With Food Allergies expresses concern that the implication of the blackberry-pelting scene is “that the rabbits wanted to kill or harm McGregor”, and slams the filmmakers for encouraging the public to not take allergies seriously.

Meanwhile, a petition calling for an apology from the filmmakers has reached 8,000 signatures in two days, and shows no signs of slowing. The hashtag #boycottpeterrabbit is also picking up steam.

As funny as a boycott over throwing blackberries can sound, though, the mums have a point. The comments of a Facebook post by Kids With Food Allergies warning parents about the scene are flooded with stories from people who have severe anxiety or even PTSD triggered by their experiences with anaphylaxis, and the open letter to Sony cites a number of recent instances of kids dying after being bullied or pranked with their allergens at school.

Peter Rabbit was already controversial well before the allergy thing, too. When the trailer came out last year, reviewers were horrified to see the CGI rabbit twerking, trashing an empty house with veggies, and “grabbing a pile of lettuce leaves and making it rain like a banker in a stripclub”. “At least based on its trailer, the Peter Rabbit film appears to have been aggressively engineered to make people sad,” was one guy’s take.

Another recent review also takes issue with the fact that the animated rabbits steal vegetables in the film. “I guess Peter has to get his thrills somewhere,” is the reviewer’s disapproving conclusion, despite Peter stealing vegetables being the plot of the Beatrix Potter original story.

Anyway, we’d tell you to go see it and make up your own mind, but Peter Rabbit won’t hit Australian cinemas until late March, despite the fact it was produced by Animal Logic, an Australian production company, and received funding from Screen NSW and Screen Australia.