Youād think Disneyās Big Hero 6 would steer clear of controversy. That it would be a fairly innocuous movie. Youād think!
Money Today reports that the movie, which isnāt out yet, is already creating some controversy online in South Korea, because net users are upset that the movie features alleged Rising Sun imagery.
The sun is important to the Japaneseāreligiously and culturally. The first sunrise of the year is seen as an important event. While Rising Sun imagery has been used in Japan for centuries, it was carried by the Japanese military during World War II. It is still flown by the Japanese navyāsomething the U.S. government made official after the war. The flag, however, is seen as offensive in South Korea because of what happened due to Japanese military aggression.
According to Money Today (via tipster Sang), here are the rising sun images in Big Hero 6 that are causing ire for some South Korean net users. These were spotted in the movieās trailer:
Disney said, āThere are no Rising Sun flags on display in the movie, nor was it the intention to suggest the Rising Sun flag.ā (The original comic, however, was more explicit in its Rising Sun imagery.)
Then again, this is the movieās concept art (via Hitgall):
Keep in mind that people from all walks of life worked on the movie, including, yes, those with Korean heritage, such Shi Yoon Kim and Jin Kim
https://lastchance.cc/disney-artist-pays-homage-to-studio-ghibli-1679179978%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
In the Korean version, āHiro,ā a Japanese boyās name, is āHero.ā Whatās more, his last name is no longer the Japanese surname āHamada,ā but āArmada.ā His brother, āTadashi,ā is called āTeddy,ā because āTadashiā is a Japanese nameāeven if, as noted by tipster Sang, the characterās original English-language voice actor is a half-Korean actor. Basically, explicit indications that the characters were of Japanese heritage were nixed for Korean audiences.
The Korean version also seems to have removed Japanese words that were in the original US version. Below, you can see a comparison via Extreme Movie:
However, not everything Japanese appears to have been nixed. Take the Gate Bridge, which is designed to look like torii, the gates you find at the entrance of Shinto shrines. Shintoism is Japanās indigenious religionāand closely associated with sun imagery.
Disney also re-titled the movie Big Hero, apparently so South Korean parents wonāt think itās a sequel. So, Big Hero opens in the country on January 21.
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