While I Agree with your basic assessment of this movie being garbage, I have to point out that Aokigahara is not the way
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cokezero99 — 9 years ago(May 01, 2016 12:03 PM)
Quit your whining please. Having a white actress does not make it whitewashing.
The story is plausible, or in your pathetic world can a white person not go to this forest? Obviously they can. Do white people get depressed? Yes. Are there white people working in Japan? Yes. So it is completely plausible that a depressive white woman working in Japan decides to visit an infamous place where people kill themselves.
For all your words you're just a little racist with a chip on her shoulder. A SJW who thinks artistic portrayals cannot ever touch sensitive subjects. Go back to the safe space you came from. -
kingramze — 9 years ago(May 13, 2016 12:17 AM)
Wow. I respectfully completely disagree. This was a horror movie, not a documentary. If you wanted a documentary on Japanese suicidal issues and how many choose to go to the forest to commit suicide, then this is not the movie for you - and it's not the movie's fault it doesn't project the social message of mental health issues for Japanese that YOU want portrayed. It never set out to do that as that's not exactly Hollywood entertainment.
Hollywood "whitewashes" movies because Asians are a minority in the USA. Asians are about 5% of the US Population, where Whites are about 73% and Blacks 13% with mixed race at about 10%. Hollywood is admittedly even more skewed white than the general population, but there are few, talented Asians to choose from compared to the vast pool of talented actors to choose and negotiate with for various roles.
The point of the movie was to connect with the average American and take them on a scary journey into a culture they aren't familiar with. It makes perfect sense to use any random American actor for that role especially one that ISN'T Asian so that it's clear the character is learning about the culture as WE, the audience, learn about it. That helps people identify with the character as we're on a journey together. It also lets the character do stupid things like go playing in a haunted forest where a local Japanese person would respect the forest and NOT GO IN THERE or at the very least not shrug off the danger as silly superstition as they'd respect the culture. Sure, they could have cast Rinko Kikuchi as a Japanese American visiting family in Japan and re-connecting with her heritage, possibly thinking the forest was silly superstition having grown up American and ignorant or unbelieving of such things but, maybe just maybe Rinko Kikuchi has better things to do and better projects she's working on than to take this role. You DONT KNOW why this actress was chosen or even if she took a huge pay cut to do an artsy film and expand her acting skills. Honestly, the movie does quite well along the same lines as The Grudge.
As for your comment about Ghost in the Shell JAPANESE people on the streets of Tokyo were interviewed about casting, and they LOVED that the role wasn't going to an Asian. The Japanese Anime culture believes the role SHOULD be played by a non-Asian American as that's how they see the character often Anime has Americanized characters with blue or green eyes, blonde or red hair, rounder larger eyes, etc. That's the style. Average Japanese were very confused as to why anyone would not want the current casting choice as they thought she was perfect!
I happen to have already known about the forest before watching the film, and it didn't bother me in the least. It was your average spooky story about a scary place in random country X that the stupid, arrogant American disrespects and falls prey to the evil forces they disrespected. They're a dime a dozen, and it's very typical to use a real place or story and embellish the details and use that as the basis for a horror tale explanation. Sometimes movies even make up countries so as not to insult a real country by portraying the people, architecture, or culture inaccurately. If they had changed the location to say Alabama, you'd literally have nothing to whine about other than they lifted a myth from Japan to use as the basis for a story. Instead, they chose to use the real forest and bring some awareness to it (probably for effect, as horror movies love to say they're based on real stories but, at least it raises awareness for people to investigate themselves.)
Sounds more to me like you have a HUGE chip on your shoulder and are projecting your own personal issues onto a movie that has nothing to do with them. -
omarboliveira — 9 years ago(May 14, 2016 08:46 AM)
I knew this movie was not going to be very good, only watched because of Natalie Dormer, so I think that was a smart choice.
This is an American movie, do we really expect them to care about social problems across the world while doing a B Movie?
I'm from Brazil, and i also think my country is badly portrayed in American movies, but we have a lot more important things to be concerned in real life.
Relax, is just a movie! -
oznickolaus — 9 years ago(May 17, 2016 05:52 AM)
I have not seen this film. But I do have a question based on this post. The character that Natalie Dormer plays, is she supposed to be Asian or is she a Caucasian woman visiting an Asian country? As I said, I haven't seen the film.
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djkynky1 — 9 years ago(June 19, 2016 07:53 AM)
She's an American visiting Japan. Not only did they hire a British person to play an American, she's playing the role of her twin sister.
If anything this one British woman is taking the role of 2 American actresses!!!Only ever given 2 films 10/10
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djkynky1 — 9 years ago(June 19, 2016 07:59 AM)
Have you watched this
http://www.imdb.com/board/11488602/
You'll probably hate it but it's set in the same forest.Only ever given 2 films 10/10
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greenjelly_179 — 9 years ago(July 04, 2016 01:07 PM)
for one usually Italians are listed as white.there not black people.there not going to cast black Italians in anything.the movie stunk.
heaven knows eventually some director of black descent will remake the godfather.like there making magnificent seven..even though that was a remake
Hollywood has no new ideas. -
Masquerade0 — 9 years ago(July 18, 2016 04:14 AM)
Apparently you can't set a story with a white protagonist anywhere in world without it being some kind of racism. These accusations of "whitewashing", claiming a white actress or actor can't portray a certain character because of the context of the story, are based of racism themselves. That's the irony of it all.
Get over yourself and look at the actual movie rather than search for things to get offended by. Man, you really must have had a heart attack when Nick Fury became a black guy. -
iamtherobotman — 9 years ago(January 27, 2017 05:24 AM)
Aries_Girl84.
Wow, just WOW!!!
I think you might very well have missed the alleged plot of the Film, while losing 'it' yourself.
The story isn't about a Japanese girl going into the Forest to find her Japanese Sister who is lost in there.
The story is about a White girl going to Japan to look for her White sister who works in Japan and is lost in there
Do you see the difference? Do you understand the difference??
This would be similar to an Italian making a Film about an Italian going to New York and being caught up in Racial bullying.
I wonder how you would have reacted had the writers decided to make this Film about a Japanese girl going to the Forest to look for her Japanese sister who was lost in there BUT had ALL the dialogue in English???
You see, the issue with ( excuse me here please ) retards such as you is that you are all far too willing to cry 'Victim', you are all too willing to shout 'Racist' without actually understanding what it is you're actually saying or aparantly protesting. You all jump the latest trendy bandwagon because you are all pathetically lonely, simple, weak minded fools. You are frightened to be seemingly left behind and so desperately want and need to be part of a scene or a group so you can in some way justify your own being and feel like you are actually doing something worthwhile.
I don't know anything about you but i can guarantee you are under the age of 23 and have throughout your years at School been informed and indeed assured that regardless, you are worthy, you are a winner and your voice has always mattered as much as the next person. You've been told that even as a child you have the exact same rights as any adult and that no one ( even a parent) can ever tell you to do something you don't want to because that is against your Human Rights!!!
I'm afraid to have to tell you, the real world does not work by those rules.
Nothing is Black and White. Even Black and White are only extreme shades of Grey.