It's interesting to see Hollywood feature Asian actors in leading roles instead of supporting roles. However, this film is not without its share of controversy, particular in regards to its representation of non-Chinese in Singapore as well as casting a mixed, British-Malaysian actor in the main role.
Re: Crazy Rich Asians
Posted: 2018-04-26 09:43pm
by Raw Shark
This just seems like the latest permutation of the "My Big, Fat, Greek Wedding" sub-genre. They'll do African and Inuit next, and then churn out re-hashes or, in an ideal world, abandon the concept entirely.
Re: Crazy Rich Asians
Posted: 2018-04-27 04:44am
by mr friendly guy
Well the movie is based on the novel of the same name by a Singaporean author, who published it in 2013. I remember seeing this at the airport bookshop. So I can't accuse Hollywood of rehashing things here. Not sure if I want to see it though.
Re: Crazy Rich Asians
Posted: 2018-04-27 12:44pm
by Elheru Aran
The 'marriage between two different families and ensuing drama' plot is pretty old. Father of the Bride, anybody? Romeo and Juliet?
This is just another variation on the theme. The only thing that'll really sink it or save it is how good the actors and the writing are. That, and whether the... I don't know what a good Asian equivalent of 'Anglosphere' is. Sinosphere? Anyway, whether the Asian market embraces it.
Re: Crazy Rich Asians
Posted: 2018-05-07 04:40am
by PainRack
The genre isn't that popular anymore , especially after the Pan Asian wave has gone by so I doubt this movie will set any records.
Still, the book was supposedly quite good....
Re: Crazy Rich Asians
Posted: 2018-08-25 05:12am
by mr friendly guy
Elheru Aran wrote: ↑2018-04-27 12:44pm
The 'marriage between two different families and ensuing drama' plot is pretty old. Father of the Bride, anybody? Romeo and Juliet?
This is just another variation on the theme. The only thing that'll really sink it or save it is how good the actors and the writing are. That, and whether the... I don't know what a good Asian equivalent of 'Anglosphere' is. Sinosphere? Anyway, whether the Asian market embraces it.
The launch of “Crazy Rich Asians,” starring Constance Wu as a Chinese American woman who travels to Singapore to meet her boyfriend’s uber-rich family, also marks the biggest opening for a romantic comedy since “Trainwreck’s” $30 million launch in 2015.
And the Warner Bros. movie’s box-office success can be directly attributed to enthusiasm among moviegoers of Asian descent, as the demographic, which usually comprises 6 percent of U.S.-Canada ticket sales, accounted for a whopping 38 percent for “Crazy Rich Asians.” By comparison, Caucasians made up 41 percent of ticket sales for the film, Latinos 11 percent and African American 6 percent.
Still not going to watch it, but it is interesting to see how well this does.