ShinHakkaider said:
I also think that fighting the fighters of different nationalities is a staple in martial arts films quite frankly. I mean the same thing is done at the end of Game of Death, and most recently in Tom Yun Goong w/ Tony Jaa. Heck, look at all of the fighting video games for petes sake. Tekken, Virtua Fighter, I even think that Dhalsim uses the East Indian fighter from Master of the Flying Guillotine as it's template.
My complaints have nothing to do with there being foriegners or even foriegners as bad guys per se. The bad guys in Jackie Chan's Project A movies were foriegners, but the movies were also set in "foriegn countries" so I didn't have a problem with that. In Japan there were a series of Mafia vs Yakuza movies and I don't really have a problem with that since it's not like mobsters are red cross volunteers.
ShinHakkaider said:
Anyway I way trying to avoid commenting on the whole "evil foreigners" thing. I think it's really kind of silly being that there are fair amount of US made action movies use the evil foreigners idea especially the british villian. You know Rocky IV (Russian), Die Hard (European), Marked for Death (Jamaican) and the list can go on an on and on if I bother to go digging and not use the examples off the top of my head.
Again it's not so much the fact that the villians are foriegners that bothers me, it's the emphasis that is placed
in the trailer on the foriegners being there to "humiliate" and "Bring China to it's knees." and this is in the American trailer! I can only imagine what the chinese trailer was like.
If it was also only this film that had this sort of theme that wouldn't bother me. But there are a substantial number of movies with similar themes that I've seen and I don't exactly go out of the way to catch martial arts flicks about evil foriegners. Plus, I keep reading reports about how the Chinese Communist party is increasingly turning to rabid nationalism to help butress their rule and deflect criticisim of their missdeeds.
You're examples are of course true, but the thing that is different at least as I see it is that Hans Gruber isn't bad and evil
because he's a foriegner, it's because he's the bad guy, who happens to be a foriegner. Probably because Alan Rickman sounds so cool doing that accent. Hans is a foriegner in large part probably due to a reverse snobbery. We tend to look at Europeans as being more cultured and sophisticated than americans, especially working class cops like John McClane.
However, if the US started making dozens of different movies about various attrocities that the British had committed in the American Revolution and the war of 1812, in which characters complained constantly about how the evil british robbed us of our "birthright" of Canada. I'd start being concerned about that too. I've also known americans who've complained about Mel Gibson's movie "The Patriot" precisely because the british characters were portrayed as evil for no good reason and in contradiction of the historical record. I think that is a valid complaint about the film.
ShinHakkaider said:
Like I said before I saw this movie several months ago and watched it again a few weeks ago and the entire conflict with the foreign chamber of of commerce takes place via flash forward in the first 5 - 10 min of the movie and then the last 30 min of the movie. If the movie has a real antagonist it's Yuan jia huo HIMSELF. He sees some thing happen as a child that molds him into a not so nice adult. For a large portion of the film he's his worst enemy until he's forced to take a good look at himself and what he means to his friends and country men.
The other thing to consider is how films are marketed and sold, we've sent more than our share of jingoistic action movies over seas and relied on the universal theme of mindless violence to sell tickets. To be annoyed that a movie made by the chinese mainly,for a chinese audience is a little..well I dont know what it is, but it seems a little strange. I'm a black man born in brooklyn NY and grew up watching predominately white heroes (until I discovered Bruce Lee and Jackie Chan in the early 70's) save the world for most of my life. So I really dont see what the problem is here.
But hey maybe it's just me...
I would be very pleased if it's not the sort of film they seem to be billing it as. Also I'm quite frankly not a fan of mindlessly jingoistic american films like the aformentioned Rocky IV either.