It's not that I'm racist, but I'm really wondering - do Arabs look the same as Europeans? That's all I know. For someone like me who doesn't know, you make the Spaniards, the British and the Indians play Arabs, isn't that misleading? Does this get the right impression of the Arabs?
It seems very narrow to think that acting is limited by race. Back then, when Chinese beauties went to act as geishas, we still understand that, in terms of appearance, Chinese women and Japanese women cannot be said to be different in appearance. Later, when the Japanese went to play Genghis Khan, they had doubts in their hearts, but they didn't come up with questions like this -- which is Mongolian, and it doesn't look like Genghis Khan at all. Now we have black eyes, I really don't know what an Arab should look like, but the more I look at it, the more wrong it is, and I have no confidence in my heart. Coupled with the English dialogue with an unknown accent, without subtitles, it is really foggy and rainy.
And don't worry about race appearance. In terms of acting, only Mark Strong feels a bit. The heroine is a pure vase, saying an Arabic name, and even the pronunciation is different from others. I don't know where Nan Zhujiao came from, and it's hard to say whether it's because of poor acting skills or because of our cultural gap. In my opinion, I often face the camera with a face like "Ah? What are you shooting at me? I'm just here to fight." soy sauce" expression. Antonio Banderas can't say what's wrong, the whole character feels more symbolic.
Because the understanding is very limited, the plot seems to be difficult to comment on. As for the Arab culture in the end experience or not. In fact, there is still a little bit. The main feeling is that if you believe that God threw you into such a piece of yellow sand, lack of water and resources, your ancestors lived here for generations, and you also learned that someone lived in the fertile land and fertile fields, When someone lives in a lush forest and grassland, you can still believe that God loves you, that God has a reason for arranging you like this, and that you can still obey and revere. This belief is really not easy. . . . . .
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