When the trailer for Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey hit the internet last year, it produced a mild viral hysteria. The angriest Pooh fans accused director Rhys Frake-Waterfield of invading their childhood psyches, the creative equivalent of napalming 100 Aker Wood. When the film was released in theaters, critics mauled it, agreeing “this Pooh stinks.” Others—50 percent of the audience on Rotten Tomatoes and a profitable proportion of Mexico—appreciated its gruesome absurdity.
Beneath the opprobrium lies an interesting legal question: How was a filmmaker whose previous movies included Croc!, Dinosaur Hotel, and Easter Bunny Massacre: The Bloody Trail able to twist one of Britain’s most beloved bears—a character associated with Disney for decades—into a honey-dribbling serial killer? The simple answer, of course, is that some of the bear’s copyright protection had expired. But the deeper, subtler point is that Pooh flogging Christopher Robin with Eeyore’s severed tail is good for the health of creativity in America.
English author A. A. Milne published the first Pooh book, Winnie-the-Pooh, in 1926. Its forest of cutesy critters was intended, famously, to entertain Milne’s son, Christopher Robin. Disney first began licensing Pooh in 1961, dropping the original hyphens and introducing new characters, like Gopher, who first appeared in Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree. In 2001, the company paid $350 million for the rights to Pooh. But that first book—which contains 10 stories, including classics in which Eeyore loses his tail and Pooh has an unfortunate bee encounter—entered the US public domain in January 2022, making way for Blood and Honey.
Frake-Waterfield explains that making his Pooh was a two-stage process. First, he could work only from the 1926 book, not any of Milne’s three later works (which will trickle into the public domain in the coming years), and certainly not from anything Disney added in its adaptations. So he cleared his mind of Pooh-related childhood memories. He couldn’t use Gopher—or Tigger—and he certainly couldn’t trap victims with a game of Poohsticks. Also, the bear had to be naked: It was Disney that decked him out in his delightful red crop top.
On top of all that, Frake-Waterfield had to be careful not to confuse the public. A Chucky-sized “little menace” of a Winnie that “runs around stabbing people,” in Frake-Waterfield’s words, runs the risk of eliding with Disney’s version. So his Pooh is Michael Myers-sized. To be extra careful, he Googled every detail in his story to ensure he hadn't committed subconscious plagiarism. Blood and Honey hit theaters in February, and to date he’s heard nothing from Disney about his film.