Bruce Lee Movie Stars a White Guy Because Of Course it Does

This morning, Deadline unveiled the first trailer for Birth of the Dragon, which recently made its debut at the Toronto International Film Festival. Ostensibly, the film depicts the legendary fight between Bruce Lee (played by Philip Ng) and Wong Jack Man (Yu Xia). But because this is Hollywood, the movie is going to be told from the perspective of a white dude.

Billy Magnussen plays Steve McKie (basically, Steve McQueen), one of Lee’s students and the one who brings Lee and Wong together. Apparently? Basically, Bruce Lee v Wong Jack Man: Dawn of Jeet Kune Do is just the backdrop for a film described as:

…a San Francisco-set coming-of-age story involving a rough and tumble young white man who matches the feuding fighting legends in the brawl as he pursues a Romeo and Juliet romance with a young Chinese immigrant [JingJing Qu] under the control of the Chinese mob.

Because no one wants to go see a movie in which Bruce Lee battles a legendary martial artist, we have to be stuck with another white savior story? This whole thing reminds me of the lead up to another film featuring a legendary battle between kung fu icons. In 2008, Lionsgate released Forbidden Kingdom, which featured the first time Jet Li and Jackie Chan were in the same movie. And just like Birth of the Dragon, the filmmakers just had to put a white dude in as the audience’s surrogate.

Rather than waste any more headspace on this disaster of a bio-pic (which is a shame because Philip Ng looks to be an excellent Bruce) I’m just going to repost an essay I wrote for Rice Daddies eight years ago that is, sadly, still relevant today.

Asian Americans and Mainstream Hollywood:
21, Forbidden Kingdom, and Harold & Kumar

Originally posted April 18, 2008

I’ve wanted to write this for a while now, so what better time than the opening day of the long awaited Jet Li vs. Jackie Chan duel, The Forbidden Kingdom? All opening within a month of one another, three movies (21, The Forbidden Kingdom, and Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay) have significant relevance to Hollywood’s current ideas about Asian American actors and audiences. One movie is a true story about Asian American MIT students. Another features two icons of Hong Kong cinema facing off for the first time. And the third is the big budget sequel to a cult hit about a couple of Asian American stoners. The studios’ approaches to — and audiences’ expectations of — these films are quite telling about the current state of Asian Americans in mainstream Hollywood.

The impetus for writing this post was actually driven by seeing TV spots for the Chan/Li actioner. The film, which is a quasi-sequel/follow up to the classic Journey to the West, has been anticipated with bated breath by both of Jackie’s and Jet’s legions of fans. I had followed some of the news about the movie ever since it was announced last year and was disappointed to learn that a major plot point in the flick involves a white teenager (with a kung fu fetish, of course) being transported back to ancient China. On the one hand, I can understand the premise of the time travel conceit: modern audiences need a readily identifiable character to help navigate the “exotic” fantasyland of China (which is problematic in its own right, but that’s for another post). This is a typical storytelling technique that can be found in Alice in Wonderland, The Neverending Story, and The Matrix. My issue isn’t with the framing of the film in these terms. What I find troubling is the notion that said teenager had to be Caucasian. Here’s the plot synopsis according to IMDB:

In Forbidden Kingdom, American teenager Jason (Michael Angarano), who is obsessed with Hong Kong cinema and kungfu classics, finds an antique Chinese staff in a pawn shop: the legendary stick weapon of the Chinese sage and warrior, the Monkey King (Jet Li). With the lost relic in hand, Jason unexpectedly finds himself transported back to ancient China.

There, he meets the drunken kungfu master, Lu Yan (Jackie Chan); an enigmatic and skillful Silent Monk (Jet Li); and a vengeance-bent kung fu beauty, Golden Sparrow (Crystal Liu Yi Fei), who lead him on his quest to return the staff to its rightful owner, the Monkey King — imprisoned in stone by the evil Jade Warlord (Collin Chou) for five hundred years. Along the way, while attempting to outmaneuver scores of Jade Warriors, Cult Killers, and the deadly White Hair Demoness, Ni Chang (Li Bing Bing), Jason learns about honor, loyalty, friendship, and the true meaning of kung fu, and thus frees himself.

The decision to cast Michael Angarano as Jason is part of the Hollywood tradition to — as movie critic Peter Martin puts it, “experience an exotic locale peopled entirely by ‘others’ through the eyes of a Caucasian character.” As I said earlier, I have no issue with the “fish out of water” premise. However, I think the producers of the film would have been smarter to make the role of Jason an Asian American character. Not only would that have given an opportunity to a young Asian American actor to star in a surefire hit, it might have given the movie a more nuanced message. Again, Martin:

If the producers had dared to cast an Asian, Asian-American, or African-American, that could have opened up all kinds of interesting twists: the young Asian not acquainted with his own cultural history, the Asian-American torn between two cultures, the African-American similarly — but differently — torn.

From a marketing standpoint, many execs still believe that audiences won’t flock to a movie unless the lead is white (more on that later). They’d argue that money, not political correctness, is the motivating factor when casting roles that could otherwise go to actors of color. After all, it’s said that the only color Hollywood sees is green. Therefore, making Jason a Caucasian is viewed solely as a financial decision. Even if that were true, which is debatable, it’s interesting to note that much of the marketing materials for Forbidden Kingdom make little or no mention of Angarano’s participation in the film. Instead, many of the TV spots I’ve seen, as well as the film’s one-sheet, play up the martial arts aspect and focus on the iconography of Jackie Chan and Jet Li. So if shoehorning a Caucasian teenager into the plotline is necessary to attract that demographic to the theaters, why leave him out of the marketing? Well, probably because “Jackie Chan Fights Jet Li — For the First Time!” kinda sells itself. Which brings me back to my original point: how unnecessary it is to make Jason’s character Caucasian, and thus, denying an Asian American actor a plum part in a big film.

Alas, at least Jason is a fictional character; which can’t be said for 21, another movie with ramifications in the Asian American community. Based on Ben Mezrich’s 2003 book Bringing Down the House, the movie follows a group of MIT students as they use their indomitable math skills to take Vegas casinos for millions. In Mezrich’s book, the students were a multicultural bunch whose leader was revealed to be an Asian American named Jeff Ma. In fact, one of the plot points in the book dealt with how the group used ethnic stereotypes as part of their cover when suckering dealers at the blackjack tables. Apparently, the studio thought a true story about Asian American MIT students would not appeal to mainstream (read: Caucasian) audiences unless the leads were white. Therefore, rather than find a hot, young Asian American actor to portray Jeff’s character, Columbia Pictures cast British Across the Universe star Jim Sturgess. In an article published in 2005, Mezrich discussed the studio’s thought process when casting the movie:

During the talk, Mezrich mentioned the stereotypical Hollywood casting process — though most of the actual blackjack team was composed of Asian males, a studio executive involved in the casting process said that most of the film’s actors would be white, with perhaps an Asian female. Even as Asian actors are entering more mainstream films, such as Better Luck Tomorrow and the upcoming Memoirs of a Geisha, these stereotypes still exist, Mezrich said.

Like the casting of Forbidden Kingdom, Hollywood’s conventional wisdom is that Asians — and more specifically Asian Americans — cannot open big at the box office. This self-fulfilling prophecy, in a strange way, is reinforced by 21’s actual success at the box office (opening at #1 and so far earning over $70 million). Due to the movie’s success, star Jim Sturgess is Hollywood’s latest it-boy and is seeing his star on the rise. Even Jeff Ma, the basis for Sturgess’ character, sees nothing inherently wrong with his story being trans-racialized for the movies. In an interview with AICN, Ma revealed:

For me it wasn’t a big deal, because for about three years people had been asking me who I wanted to play me in a movie and I never was saying like “John Cho” or “Chow Yun-Fat” or “Jackie Chan…” I really wasn’t and I mean if I asked you who you would want to play you in a movie, you wouldn’t be thinking “I want the most similar person,” but you would be thinking ”Who’s cool?” or who do you think would personify your personality or who is a good actor or who is talented, so as much as I think people like to look at it at face value like that, the reality is if you ask anyone who they wanted to play you, it wouldn’t necessarily be “Who’s the most ethnically tied to me?”

It’s telling that Ma, as many Hollywood execs are wont to do, conflates Asian actors (Chow and Chan) with an Asian American actor (Cho). Since 21 is designed to be a star-making vehicle for its leads, it makes sense that Columbia would want a “cool” actor for the role. The assumption, though, is that there isn’t any “cool” Asian American actor (other than John Cho, of course) capable of playing Jeff on screen. Never mind actors such as Masi Oka, Parry Shen, Dante Basco, Roger Fan, Sung Kang, Ken Leung, or James Kyson Lee, just to name a few. Not to mention the thousands of up and coming actors of Asian descent who are still waiting for that big break. (It must be said, though, that 21 features two Asian Americans — Aaron Yoo and Lisa Lapira — in the cast. However, their parts are minor at best, and according to EW.com’s Youyoung Lee, “buffoonish” at worst.) If any of the above mentioned actors had been cast as the lead in 21, it’d be safe to say that the myth of Asian Americans being unable to open a movie would be officially rendered moot; which brings me to Harold & Kumar.

The 2004 stoner flick, Harold & Kumar Go to White Castle, was a modest success in theaters. Grossing over $23 million worldwide, more than doubling its production budget, White Castle went on to make millions more on DVD, in the process, becoming an instant cult hit and ultimately leading to the buzzed-about sequel that’s set to open on April 25. The revolutionary thing about Harold & Kumar was its ability to portray its Asian American leads as real, complex individuals — who happen to really love pot. John Cho, in an interview with Angry Asian Man, summed it up thusly:

I think there’s something, from a racial standpoint, an attitude that feels accurate… And I think it might be the fact that it addresses race as we do — as people of color do — that we’re aware of it, that we live with it, but it doesn’t consume us. And sometimes, white media thinks that we’re obsessed with it, and then Asian American films… we make films that obsess over her our race. It’s an hour and a half of people talking about what it means to be Asian.

But Harold and Kumar addresses it, then doesn’t, then addresses it, then kind of addresses it, then laughs at it… and then somebody smokes pot.

To New Line Cinema’s credit, the studio bet against Hollywood conventional wisdom and backed the movie with a significant marketing push and theater saturation. And while the stoner comedy as a genre is known for featuring people of color (see Up in Smoke and Friday), Harold & Kumar proved a major motion picture starring charismatic Asian American leads could be successful. Thanks in large part to the film’s success, which by all accounts entered the pop cultural zeitgeist on a speeding cheetah, Cho and co-star Kal Penn became household names able to translate their popularity into mainstream success. Since White Castle, Penn has starred on the TV hit House M.D. and Cho recently landed the coveted role of Sulu in J.J. Abrams’ Star Trek reboot.

All three of these films demonstrate in different ways where mainstream Hollywood is in regards to Asian Americans, and where it still needs to go. With Harold and Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay poised to out-gross (in more ways than one, natch) its predecessor, the hope remains that Hollywood’s ill-conceived perception about Asian Americans will change. Though I’m not holding my breath.

28 thoughts on “Bruce Lee Movie Stars a White Guy Because Of Course it Does

  1. just stick with the real bruce lee biopic starring jason scott lee. love that film. this is so messy. our words fall on death hears

      1. all biopics do but at least its told from his point of view and tells his life story instead of focusing on one moment. plus its just a good film in my humble opinion. and one can always do research (as one should with these kinds of film) to see what is true or not and what they left out

  2. that ma kid has some serious white whorship problems, disgust me ugh! he is so part of the problem

  3. I watched Forbidden Kingdom one time for the fight scenes. I’ve hated that movie ever since and its sad because it stars two of my favorite martial artists. I kept fast forwarding through the scenes with the white kid, whenever I could. Bulletproof Monk as another bad one you only need to see once to clock its awfulness.

    Jeebus! But I hate these mashups.

  4. Reblogged this on University of Broken Glass and commented:
    Because of course… I was already heart broken when they decided to have a becky feature as Major Motoko Kusanagi in Ghost in the Shell… which is fiction. Now to have a white man portray Bruce Lee??? I have lost all hope…

  5. Y’know, I was looking forward to this movie for a while because it had all the right elements that a kung fu film needs. Corey Yuen as fight choreographer? Check. Asian American stuntman from Chi-town as Bruce Lee? Word. Taking in place in good ol’ San Fran? Solid. Then slowly I heard that it needed a white dude. Then I hear it’s gonna be Rashomon inspired. Now said white dude gotta break out the sistah from bad bad Chinese gangsters. Oh man…now it’s so convoluted I don’t even know what to do. I wanted a film about this infamous duel, and now I got this crazy film which, I am afraid, may not even know what it wants to be.

  6. F*ck this movie. I will NOT be supporting it in any way, shape or form and I am so SICK of “white saviour” flicks.
    P.S.
    I am a huge Bruce Lee fan (he was my childhood idol) and this tripe dishonors his memory. 不(不)

  7. We know diversity sells, yet Hollywood remains overwhelmingly white and male. Ethnic minorities, who make up nearly 40 percent of the U.S. population, received only 17 percent of the lead roles in theatrical films. (That figure seem high, to me.)

    And among the ranks of top Hollywood film executives, the report states, “the corps of CEOs and/or chairs running the 18 studios examined was 94 percent white and 100 percent male.”

    Source: http://www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch/2015/02/28/389259335/diversity-sells-but-hollywood-remains-overwhelmingly-white-male

    1. I think times are changing society’s tastes do as well. Diversity does sell I’ve noticed some of the most diverse stories are scifi and post apocalyptic because for example in post apocalyptic stories people from all walks of life (white, black, Asian, Hispanic, LGBT) have to set aside their petty differences if they are to survive it’s never easy but they have no choice. Scifi stories tell of a future where humanity’s problems continue into space where problems are resources, energy production and how to manage an increasingly vast human race.

  8. It’s not 100% about money.

    It’s the same reason that the fashion industry mostly chooses to ignore non-skinny women, even though Chanel could make a killing by catering to this ignored demographic. It’s the same reason that Mercedes-Benz used to fret that too many Black women were buying their cars. It’s why Ivy League schools are deathly afraid of “too many Asians.”

    There’s a strong element of social prestige attached to race. That’s why these studios/companies/schools don’t want to become an “ethnic movie” or a “Black brand” or an “Asian school.”

    In other words, movies keep casting White dudes as heroes because the makers themselves want to see movies with White dudes and associate such movies with higher status. “White stories” are at the top of the hierarchy.

    1. ^this^

      Unfortunately, because history is still written by mostly White men, and business success is still determined by White men – their stories and viewpoints are considered “mainstream”, everything else is a minority.

  9. I am not here for some movie about a stoner acid dropping dude who becomes a martial artist… not here at all.

    I mean, between this and Iron Fist and the fuckery of Dr Strange, Ghost in the Shell, it’s like Hollywood is going out of their way to give the middle finger to as many Asian Americans as possible.

  10. Pingback: Sagar Media in
  11. Goddamnit! I’m a Creole- multi-racial. I’m sick of this shit: white kid gets drawn into the middle of minority struggle, aka, Year Of The Dragon, Avatar (Cameron’s), The King And I, etc.

    Some are classics and choose to bridge the gap between cultures, like the above, but too many are stuck in the 19th-20th (racial) century.

    Time to wrest control of Hollywood out of the hands of the old white and Jewish men and women and install a more progressive, inclusive type of association of more well-rounded minds.

    Being partly white and a little bit Jewish, I lose no sleep over seeing more people like myself- Native American and Black, in the studio hot seat from here on out.

    1. They think “white kids” are more marketable, but that’s so becoming ALT FACTS.

  12. Something about stoner comedies being known to feature characters of color upsets me… The few successful films with POC leads involve them being drug addicted, lazy, buffoonish, simple minded characters with few goals other than getting high, getting food and getting women (if even that much), and y’all (or most people) are cool with that??

    1. Hollywood actors of color need to head the Screen Actors Guild, Writers Guild Of America, American Federation Of TV & Radio Artists. When those places, talent agencies, entertainment lawyer offices, banks, ad and PR agencies are run by POC, then we’ll start seeing more equality in popular entertainment. It’s a start.

Comments are closed.