So: why are they so concerned about stopping you from smoking?
Does nicotine make people smarter?
HBO Max is cutting back on costs — and cigarettes, too.
In a bizarre move spotted by film buffs on social media, HBO Max has been censoring cigarettes from select iconic movie posters that it displays on its streaming site.
Angry movie fans took to Twitter to reveal the missing smokes on HBO Max’s feeds, which appeared to be scrubbed from iconic movie posters for Robert Altman’s “McCabe & Mrs. Miller” as well as “The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean.”
In the photoshopped posters, stars Warren Beatty and Paul Newman no longer hold cigarettes between their fingers but instead appear to be posing — bizarrely — with digits raised, staring off into the distance.
One irritated cinephile slammed the streaming service, which is known for hits like “Game of Thrones,” its prequel, “House of Dragon,” and “Succession,” tweeting:
“No Smoking! Twitter users report HBO Max removed Warren Beatty’s and Paul Newman’s cigars from movie poster art used on its home page: McCabe & Mrs. Miller. The Life and Times of Roy Bean.”
No Smoking!
Twitter users report HBO Max removed Warren Beatty’s and Paul Newman's cigars from movie poster art used on its home page:
McCabe & Mrs. Miller.
The Life and Times of Roy Bean. pic.twitter.com/QLPz0olJz1— Pete Salisbury (@Tuckerpete) September 13, 2022
A photo of before and after shots of the altered posters was included, garnering a slew of outraged replies.
“Hahaha absolutely ridiculous. Considering 90% of staff at their parent WB/Discovery vape and sniff cocaine at their desk,” one user tweeted.
“How ridiculous,” another user wrote. “I am SO glad that I don’t give a penny to @HBOMax,” added another.
HBO Max did not comment on why the images were altered.
The news was picked up by a handful of outlets, including New York’s Vulture site, which noted that cigarettes have also been scrubbed from Michelle Reis’s character in the promo still for Wong Kar-wai’s “Fallen Angels,” as well as Kirk Douglas’s character in the poster for “There Was a Crooked Man.”
The author of the Vulture article, Eric Vilas-Boas, tweeted out before and after images of the Douglas poster.
“So bizarre once you see some of these side-by-side…,” he wrote.
They’re probably going to go through and remove all of the cigarettes from the films themselves.
I’ve never seen a better reason to start smoking.