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User Reviews for: American Born Chinese

RdWd
8/10  11 months ago
Kelvin's Yu's new Disney+ show _American Born Chinese_ is a breath of fresh air from Disney. It borrows from its source material, a well-respected graphic novel by Gene Luen Yang, and like all good "wuxia" fiction cultivates and improves itself for the contemporary audience. The original novel divides its story between the Monkey King, second-generation teen Jin Wang and a buffoonish racist caricature Chin-Kee; with the TV show it follows similar emotional beats but deviates fairly early on. Here we have Sun Wukong's son taking precedence as the Monkey King on Earth (yes, this works as a sequel to _Journey to the West_!) and a soccer-loving secret-nerd Jin. But the biggest change is the racist stereotype Chin-kee being replaced with Ke Huy Quan's character Jamie Yao who reflects on his role as an Asian stereotype in a 1990s sitcom. This takes the weight of the racist narrative opposed to the novel which was set in 2006, but it's brilliantly done and all three story strands fit well together just like in the original story.

But there are more noticeable differences. One distinct one is that Michelle Yeoh's Guanyin (Goddess of Mercy) replaces the role of the original author's Christian Chinese God (though Chinese Christianity does feature) which I think works far better for the overall frame story. The other is that on top of this being a coming-of-age genre, it's also now a martial arts story. Taking inspiration from both wuxia (martial hero) and xianxia (heavenly hero) subgenres, the show uses a mixture of tropes common to both, for example, we have characters using "weightlessness" (that's your 'flying' and wire-fu) as well as magical weaponry from Heaven, but also grounds itself in hand-to-hand combat too. The action is expertly shot for a Western production and allows the viewer to follow it with ease. This is not necessarily going to work for every Western viewer, but for those willing to give it a go - it's excellent introduction to the wuxia genre and Chinese storytelling. More of this, please, Disney..

That said - it's way too short with only eight episodes. A lot more could have been fleshed out in some characters' motives. Also, comparisons will of course be made to this being _Everything Everywhere All At Once_-lite. The cast and theme are both similar (Michelle Yeoh, Stephanie Hsu and Ke Huy Quan all feature) and therefore might come across as a quick Disney cash-grab in some small part but that's surface level. If I was going to compare this to any other show, I'd say this was Disney+'s take on Netflix's ever-popular _Cobra Kai_ (with a fantastical twist). Hopefully, we'll get a few more seasons of this to match that show!
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tgrbabydoll
9/10  10 months ago
First the show is fantastic. Lucy Liu directed some, Michelle Yeoh is amazing and the whole thing is fun. The Monkey King fairy tales and mythology are some of the best ever written. The show is cute, centers around teenagers, always good for kids, and is made with an obvious effort to attack negative stereotypes. It also focuses on ending the idea that kids must be friends with these but not those. Those ideas have always been disgusting whether sport v nerd or racist. The show confronts the issue without being overbearing, in a cute, but real way.

KUDOS TO DISNEY AND MARVEL Given the attacks by some politicians in the USA that have resulted in over a 300% increase in hate crimes in less than 6 years against Chinese Americans and Asian Americans, Disney and Marvel taking a proactive effort in addressing negative stereotypes that you have to be white and a jockto be American. I'm positive as far as the Native Americans are concerned all those white supremacists can go back to Europe "where they came from" if they really don't want to start accepting the USA has always been a better ideal than they want to live up to.

Special call out to the racist in the comments, calling himself "who's your Buddha" because for some reason these racist scumbags always think it makes them sound less offensive by trying to tie themselves to a culture they don't understand while disrespecting it. I'm your Buddha sweetie. Your racism is going to haunt you eventually. What comes around goes around.
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