Film’s suspension comes after
Bruce Lee’s daughter made direct appeal to China’s National Film Administration
DM CHAN
According to a report from the
Hollywood Reporter, US film director Quentin Tarantino will not be re-cutting
his Once Upon a Time in Hollywood for the Chinese mainland, Global
Times reported.
Originally set for release on
Friday, the film was suspended indefinitely a week before its release by
Chinese regulators.
Tarantino, who has final-cut
rights for the film in his contract, refused to cooperate with Chinese
authorities when the film’s co-producer Bona Film Group asked him to help
re-edit the film in order to re-approve the release, according to a report from
film news site Cinema Blend.
The Hollywood Reporter
reported that the suspension came after Bruce Lee’s daughter Shannon Lee made a
direct appeal to China’s National Film Administration to have her father’s
controversial portrayal in the film changed. No official statement about the
suspension has been made by any parties involved.
“I personally do not think
that Shannon Lee, as one of the films’ biggest critics, is the main reason
stopping the film’s release in the Chinese mainland, because according to the
reaction and feedback from those who have seen the film, Tarantino’s use of
Bruce Lee’s image is rather biased and even an insult,” Shi Wenxue, a film
critic and teacher at the Beijing Film Academy, told the Global Times.
The film portrays Bruce Lee as
an arrogant person who claims he could have “crippled” Muhammad Ali in a fight,
yet loses in a fight to Brad Pitt’s Cliff Booth.
“Bruce Lee worked on screen to
change the US stereotype of Chinese. However, after half a century, we see the
expression of such a stereotype, which is unacceptable,” Shi said.
Shannon Lee once told The Wrap
in July that she found the film “disheartening.”
“I understand they want to
make the Brad Pitt character this super bad-ass who could beat up Bruce Lee.
But they didn’t need to treat him in the way that white Hollywood did when he
was alive.”
She added that “It was really
uncomfortable to sit in the theater and listen to people laugh at my father.”
The hashtag related to Shannon
Lee’s dissatisfaction about Once Upon a Time in Hollywood has earned
310 million views on China’s Twitter-like Sina Weibo as of Sunday.
“Bruce Lee’s overconfidence
and arrogant image in the film is a typical stereotype applied to Chinese in
Hollywood movies. Bruce Lee spent his whole life bringing real Chinese
characters to the world, but Tarantino brought this old image into his film
again, which is shameful to us Chinese,” one person commented on Sina Weibo.
According to Shi, Chinese
often play the role of gang members in Chinatown, or arrogant rich
second-generation Chinese in Western film and television. For example, the
Asian characters in the film Crazy Rich Asians catered to the image many US
viewers have when it comes to Asians.
Discrimination is also common
off screen as well. For instance, Vietnamese-American actress Kelly Marie Tran,
who played a role in Star Wars: The Last Jedi, suffered racist attacks and
personal abuse at the hands of Star Wars fans who were dissatisfied with her
character in the film.
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