Jin Wang est un adolescent ordinaire qui doit concilier le lycée et la vie de famille. Plus tard, Jin est involontairement mêlé à une bataille contre des dieux mythologiques chinois.Jin Wang est un adolescent ordinaire qui doit concilier le lycée et la vie de famille. Plus tard, Jin est involontairement mêlé à une bataille contre des dieux mythologiques chinois.Jin Wang est un adolescent ordinaire qui doit concilier le lycée et la vie de famille. Plus tard, Jin est involontairement mêlé à une bataille contre des dieux mythologiques chinois.
- Prix
- 3 victoires et 12 nominations au total
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This was so relatable and the awkward moments were worth watching. I cringed and knew every teenager was able to feel the pending disaster. I watched with the same feeling of "I can't watch this" with my hand over my eyes that made every John Hughes movie so great. It truly had moments from so many of my favourite coming of age movies but with action and special effects. I like that the parents are also dealing with some of the issues of self doubt and confusing cultural limitations that Jim is feeling. Confidence isn't conquered through popularity. It was always about self doubt and everyone is working on that their entire lives.
Born in China, working in the US, fluent in Mandarin. And i gotta say coming into this show i was very skeptical about whether they could tell the myth of Chinese gods well, and whether they could nail the mandarin dialogues. They did a pretty decent job. They even wrote some of the dialogues among the gods in ancient Chinese grammar (even i cant write those after studying ancient Chinese as a mandatory for 12 years from elementary to high school).
They changed Sun Wukong's origin story a bit. In Chinese myths, Wukong made a huge mess at the peach party in heaven, stole a bunch of peaches, and was punished by the Buddha by being buried under the Five-Finger Mountain for 500 yrs. He went on a quest to India for the Sutra after he got out, Eventually he was acknoledged as a god after taking on 81 obstacles along the way to India and got the Sutra.
Anyway, I am glad the story still took a nod to the old tale, with all the gods' names and story settings.
And the actors portrait of a shy american born chinse and a fresh off the boat native taiwanese, so relatable. They really nailed the nuances, well translating the thoughts i went through, looking up to white ppl, desperately trying to fit in, thinking my niches are too nerdy to be shared, the different mind sets and culture and etiquette...
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They changed Sun Wukong's origin story a bit. In Chinese myths, Wukong made a huge mess at the peach party in heaven, stole a bunch of peaches, and was punished by the Buddha by being buried under the Five-Finger Mountain for 500 yrs. He went on a quest to India for the Sutra after he got out, Eventually he was acknoledged as a god after taking on 81 obstacles along the way to India and got the Sutra.
Anyway, I am glad the story still took a nod to the old tale, with all the gods' names and story settings.
And the actors portrait of a shy american born chinse and a fresh off the boat native taiwanese, so relatable. They really nailed the nuances, well translating the thoughts i went through, looking up to white ppl, desperately trying to fit in, thinking my niches are too nerdy to be shared, the different mind sets and culture and etiquette...
.
I was excited about this show as a first generation American, the premise was intriguing and captivating, but the final result not so much. I found myself bored throughout the entire first season and the big twist I figured out very early on. There was a sub character that served little purpose other than a menial support a side story/issue. I did enjoy the last episode, just wish a little more had been put into story to pull the audience in. Finally, the choreography and CGI should have been so much better, seriously this is a Disney martial arts show. I am hoping that the first season will have enough following that maybe mor money and effort will go into season two.
Was this perfect? No, it's very Disney. However this show is still absolutely amazing and l love the homage to the retro style of old Chinese films. My partner grew up watching the Monkey King as a kid and loved how they encorproated it to the story. And as an Asian American myself, the representation I felt made my inner child cry happy tears. I saw the sadness and frustration the dad Simon faced and it just directly mirrored my dad's own experience, looking "different" from everyone else and being the butt of the joke. And I love how they portrayed the mom! Not a tiger mom, but I felt how much she genuinely care for Jin and just wanted him to follow his dreams. Thank you disney, this one was a good one and I hope for more Asian heros and heroines in the future!
10wempire
I found this show to be very enticing, fully binge-watching it in one sitting. The costumes are average, but having watched other movies trying to emulate the same energy I found American Born Chinese slightly above average. The casting was amazing, though I might just be a biased Michelle Yeoh fan, though I thought Jin's mother to be one of the best cast actors in the series along with Jin's dad. Overall, it is a teen show with a story inspired by Chinese mythology, not to be taken seriously or criticized to the standard of Breaking Bad, The Sopranos or Game of Thrones, it's your more than average Disney show with a similar feel to Wendy Wu: Homecoming Warrior, but done much better. Having a nostalgic feel to some wacky Jackie Chan movies and the cheese 2000's American teen show, a feel-good series with good acting and great familial relationships.
*I also loved the fact that the people in the show didn't need much convincing into helping with the main plot, I find it's a much more accurate depiction of the reaction a person from a chronically online generation would have, it's refreshing not having people doubt the main character's sanity for 3 episodes or even longer.
*I also loved the fact that the people in the show didn't need much convincing into helping with the main plot, I find it's a much more accurate depiction of the reaction a person from a chronically online generation would have, it's refreshing not having people doubt the main character's sanity for 3 episodes or even longer.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesMichelle Yeoh, Ke Huy Quan, Stephanie Hsu, and James Hong all previously co-starred in Tout, partout, tout à la fois (2022). Yeoh also starred with Hong in Kung Fu Panda 2 (2011), and with Hsu in Shang-Chi et la légende des dix anneaux (2021).
- ConnexionsFeatured in AniMat's Crazy Cartoon Cast: The D23 Expo 2022 Special (2022)
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- How many seasons does American Born Chinese have?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Durée
- 30m
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.78 : 1
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