Obligatory disclaimer: real life sucks, so let us talk about the ‘Shang-Chi and the Legend of 10 Rings’ movie instead. Where does it stand, exactly?
Why, at Marvel™, of course, sharing team Marvel’s™
standard brand of excellence! …Unfortunately, given that we are at Marvel’s
Phase 4 by now, that is not enough,
on its’ own – but let us elaborate.
Until ‘Shang-Chi’ rolled in, so far, all of Marvel’s
Phase 4 was all about transition: Wanda and Vision have drifted apart, (putting
it lightly), Bucky and Sam have become a duo, Loki has become a duo with
Sylvie, and has become a proper hero rather than a selfish berk, and the title
of Black Widow passed from Natasha to Yelena. Anything else? Oh yes, PP and Dr.
SS, (different one from the ‘What If?’ episode 1x04, I believe), are about to
embark on a magical journey of self-discovery, or at least PP does; I am not so
sure about the good doctor… So, where does it leave Shang-Chi?
Kind of shoehorned into the same mould, technically
speaking. Throughout the bigger part of the film, Shang-Chi travelled both
literally and spiritually, both through the external world and inside of his
own mind, trying to figure out as to who
he really was, until he succeeded, (at least, by the movie’s conclusion). That’s
not bad, but the problem is that the movie itself wasn’t a transition per se,
as the ‘Black Widow’ film was, (and even that had problems…aside from ScarJo fighting
Disney/MCU afterwards, cough), but rather it’s an introductory movie, not
unlike the initial ‘Black Panther’ film, (another one is coming out soon
enough). The ‘Black Panther’ movie had introduced Africa, (and Afro-Americans),
to MCU. Now, ‘Shang-Chi’ is doing the same thing with Far East Asia, (and also its’
native people). Again, not a bad idea, but…
…But even ‘Black Panther’ had problems with its’
message, as we’ve discussed it way back when. ‘Shang-Chi’ has the same problem,
and if you’ll say that its’ cast and crew went extra distance to avoid the clichés,
I’ll respond that they’re inevitable, because Shang-Chi himself was a cliché –
an Asian, or an Asian-American martial artist, who is trying to become ‘A Good
Guy™’ person and escape his father’s shadow. The issue of Fu Manchu was
mentioned repeatedly as ‘Shang-Chi’ was coming to the silver screens, so let’s
not chew on it too much, but, again, Fu Manchu’s villainy worked because he was
a cliché, by the Western standards anyhow – an alien, a foreigner, who isn’t,
mmm, Caucasian, but who is intelligent, and rich, and formidable all the same. ‘Shang-Chi’
the movie tries to avoid that cliché by taking place – in a large part –
outside of a real world altogether, but rather in the magical place of To-La…or
inside Shang-Chi’s mind…or on a different plane of existence altogether…you get
the drift. Not such a bad idea, but unfortunately a large part of Disney/MCU’s
strength is its’ realism; the latter often tried to reference real life events
and people, (especially in the first phases), and once ‘Shang-Chi’ moved away
from that state of affairs, it floundered. ‘Black Panther’ didn’t go in that
direction, BTW – indeed, the movie was about Wakanda ending its’ isolation, and
instead becoming a part of the greater MCU world, ‘thanks’ to Killmonger and his
actions – there’s nothing like that in ‘Shang-Chi’; rather, Wu Xenxu’s crime
organization remains a world apart from the rest of MCU, and so’s the village
of To La. ‘Black Panther’ destroyed, (well, started the process of), isolation;
‘Shang-Chi’ did none of that.
This brings us to the second big difference between ‘Black
Panther’ and ‘Shang-Chi’ – the matter of ethnicity, or of race. ‘Black Panther’
was all about Africa; ‘Shang-Chi’ – about Asia, or more precisely, it is all
about the Far East. Yes, it is a Western term, but since we are still living in
a predominantly Western world, that is the term we are going to use. Therefore,
what about it?
This is the latest attempt of the Western
cinematography to break into the Far Eastern cinemas and etc. There were ‘Crazy
Rich Asians’, ‘Mulan-2020’, ‘Raya and the Last Dragon’ to name a few, and now there
is also ‘Shang-Chi’. The West does not care about the African mass media market
and culture so much, in part, because the latter are so underdeveloped when
compared to the U.S., but it cares about the Far Eastern version because of
communism and the Far Eastern culture in general – neither of these factors are
too friendly towards the West. ‘Mulan-2020’ in particular have brought those
differences to the fore, and the West, embodies by Disney, folded first.
Disney/MCU (+SW, etc.), may pretend to be fair, progressive, politically
correct and so on, but the bottom line is all about the dollar. Given how much
of the latter ‘Shang-Chi’ has brought to Disney/MCU, it obvious works, though
maybe the heroic Black Widow ScarJo will do something about that with her
lawsuit. Anything else?
…Just that even the ‘Black Panther’ film had some
token characters of a different color, cough, that were actually important to
the film; ‘Shang-Chi’ – not so much. As a result, the movie again suffers,
becoming less of a movie and more of a propaganda piece…whose message is a lie,
on top of everything else, and everyone is aware of it, more or less
cognizantly. U.S. in general seems to have problems in this department; it
seems to rely too heavily on its’ media to shape its’ own story, and it does
not work. It didn’t work back in the elections-2016, and it doesn’t work now:
no ‘FBI: International’ or ‘NCIS: Hawaii’ TV series will hide the fact that the
U.S. withdrew from Afghanistan with its’ tail between its’ legs, no so much an
eagle or a lion, but rather whipped toy dog, but we digress.
No, no really. When ‘Black Panther’ was made and released,
the U.S. still considered itself to be on top of the world, and most of the
world played along, (cough, RF’s conquering of the Crimean peninsula in 2014,
cough). Now, ‘Shang-Chi’ is playing in the world where the former statement is
clearly false, and the rest of the world has to admit it. (Alternatively, it
was the one doing the forced admitting). How will this affect ‘Shang-Chi’ and
the rest of MCU? I have no idea, but out of the two movies, I have still
enjoyed ‘Black Panther’ better.
…This is it for now; see you all soon!
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