While watching Fist of Fury for the first time, Mao dissolved in tears, Liu recalled, and said “Bruce Lee is a hero!” Mao watched the film twice more. Liu said he did not know of any other movie that Mao viewed three times.
While watching Fist of Fury for the first time, Mao dissolved in tears, Liu recalled, and said “Bruce Lee is a hero!” Mao watched the film twice more. Liu said he did not know of any other movie that Mao viewed three times.
Nah dog, Heroic realism was a real agitprop tactic and as far as Mao’s concerned, Bruce Lee was a living example of positive heroism for the proletarian masses.
We should be following Mao’s stance on enjoying martial arts movies to a T
But it’s very, very easy for that agitprop to become counterrevolutionary, both for actual people and for fictional entities, especially when such proletariat heroes shift from examples of what the masses can do to being seen as superior to them instead, like the decay of Superman from a working class hero to a Nolanesque Randian Ubermensch jackoff.
The masses can have a little jojos as a treat
I am a JoJo enjoyer, but that dynasty itself (and its affluent origins) is kind of sus, says Comrade Amogus.
Let a hundred new Jojo families blossom!
From each according to their stands, to each according to their life energy.
Did you not read the article? The scene that Mao was reacting to was one where Lee’s character ‘kicked and smashed a wooden panel bearing the words: “Chinese and dogs not allowed”.’ It was a scene of fighting very explicitly not just for yourself or as yourself but fighting for and as the oppressed.
I went off into the weeds there when I should have first established that I was wholeheartedly sympathetic of that particular contextual moment of Mao loving that moment and wanting to see it again and again. Sorry.
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Yes, agreed! And as soon as someone ceases to do that (or in fiction, if they cease to be portrayed that way) it all goes to Great Person Theory shit. Again.
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