Classic Who "The Talons of Weng-Chiang" Parts 1&2 Reaction

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sesskasays

sesskasays

Күн бұрын

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@TheElderBlotch
@TheElderBlotch 6 ай бұрын
The Talons Of Weng-Chiang remains my favourite Fourth Doctor story and second favourite of all time. The dialogue sparkles, the characters shine, the atmosphere is palpable and the production quality for Victorian London is nothing short of magnificent. I've seen it countless times and the Leela-Litefoot scenes still make me grin like an idiot. This was Hinchcliffe and Holmes' final story together and they couldn't have ended their era on a higher note, it's their magnum opus in my opinion. (Reposting my comment because the original is hidden for some reason - I assume because of the charged debate I got in my replies.)
@adamturnsheel
@adamturnsheel Жыл бұрын
I love Jago and Litefoot! their audio dramas are so fun!
@ZakJordan98
@ZakJordan98 Жыл бұрын
The dinner scene with Litefoot and Leela is genuinely adorable
@AnotherScifiGuy
@AnotherScifiGuy Жыл бұрын
completely agree.
@Clayton-S.
@Clayton-S. Жыл бұрын
Yep, an absolutely delightful scene! As Litefoot is a Victorian Gentleman, his first thoughts would be to make his guest feel at ease and not embarrassed in any way. Especially as he is entertaining a female guest.
@Concetta20
@Concetta20 10 ай бұрын
I think the yellow face thing fell out of favor earlier in the states than it did in the UK. Maybe because we had more East Asian actors available because of the high Asian population in California; films and musicals like “Flower Drum Song” which was an all Asian cast, and Bruce Lee becoming an overnight sensation in the late ‘60’s as Cato in the “Green Hornet” tv series, helped pave the way.
@johnmcclure40
@johnmcclure40 Жыл бұрын
One kind of neat thing about this story. All of the stage magic was legitimate.
@johnmcclure40
@johnmcclure40 Жыл бұрын
For what it's worth, my personal opinion on the show is that it is a great story that is unfortunately marred by the yellowface element.
@metalmugen
@metalmugen Жыл бұрын
Fuking masterpiece this one.
@gluuuuue
@gluuuuue Жыл бұрын
As a Whovian who's also Chinese, Talons is still an iconic classic of the series and Four's era. Hands down. I get that younger audiences or just people watching it for the first time in these modern times probably will feel uncomfortable (and I appreciate it), as one probably ought to were anyone to even dream of attempting such a story and plot today. I'd blame the times, not the show for being a product of them and being made for audiences of them (I *was* alive when this was broadcast, but I was 2 and didn't see this ep until maybe several years later in the '80s). Edit: Since this came up. *I* can "compartmentalize" it. I was there. I remember those fun years. I am NOT saying that means anyone else can, should, or ought to, Asian or not. Or not to be bothered or feel uncomfortable about it. Edit 2: And I definitely don't believe I can or do speak for all other Asians. Also, Orientalism was never a reflection of Asians as much as it was of how the Western world perceived them.
@BernardJKD
@BernardJKD Жыл бұрын
The Yellow Peril genrewas vilified by the mid 1930s. Even the Chinese government were unhappy. So by 1977 it is unfortunate but nonetheless what a amazing production snd re-creation of the Yellow Peril genre.
@gluuuuue
@gluuuuue Жыл бұрын
@@BernardJKD Yeah, an' I think it was pretty clever of the Hinchcliffe Era to dive into so many different facets of gothic horror with the show's scifi spin, including this one. The casting is what it is. Pools of available acting talent are small, esp. in the UK compared to the US. There were obviously Asian actors in the more supporting roles here, but they'll go for someone with much more experience, name draw, and familiarity, which was the likely case here. Up to the '90s and even well into the 2000s, the number of Asian actors in Western cinema was comparatively small, often with the same several familiar names. Even today, Chinese actors playing Japanese characters and vice versa is still pretty common. There's certainly a ways to go, but I think most sensible people are glad these things've been changing, there're larger pools of acting talent, and that things like yellowface are a thing of the past.
@bertinamiller9626
@bertinamiller9626 Жыл бұрын
One of my favorite episodes...great reaction
@KeplersDream
@KeplersDream Жыл бұрын
I have a replica of the theatre poster for Li H'Sen Chang seen at the start of the story. It's A2 size, beautiful quality and takes pride of place in a frame in my hallway.
@gregsmith7949
@gregsmith7949 Жыл бұрын
I was just watching this on Freevee yesterday, and thinking from the ending shot that it would be great to have a copy of the poster. 🤣 Where did you get it, if you don't mind me asking. It's one of my favorite Baker stories.
@turtletrekker86
@turtletrekker86 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely one of the best Doctor Who stories not just of the original series, but in totality. But, yeah, definitely the dreaded "product of its time". Random question to the group mind out there-- Is this the only serial in which the Doctor does not wear his trademark over long scarf?
@moviesrocks2
@moviesrocks2 Жыл бұрын
Jago & Litefoot became so popular they got their own spin-off audio stories. My mom was never a Doctor Who fan, but she sat & watched this with me & loved it. one of the best stories for the entire doctor who era. can't wait to the rest of it.
@robwalton2276
@robwalton2276 Жыл бұрын
Love the Doctor and Leela’s relationship. Intelligence and instinct dynamic works really well.
@bobhughes2290
@bobhughes2290 Жыл бұрын
For an ad lib rant on such a touchy subject, I thought you did a really good job of crossing the minefield.
@cbpoppet1288
@cbpoppet1288 7 ай бұрын
For cultural context, when Talons was broadcast, the BBC was still producing and broadcasting The Black and White Minstrel show. So blackface was a routine occurrence on British TV at the time. Your reaction is entirely valid. It's not something that bothers me specifically, but I'm glad we now live in a world which has progressed, but I acknowledge there's still room for improvement. I look forward to future classic who reactions.
@stecurrell5863
@stecurrell5863 Жыл бұрын
One of my all-time favourite Tom Baker stories, classic
@tonynelson2262
@tonynelson2262 Жыл бұрын
Actor John Bennett (Li H'sen Chang) was also in The Fifth Element starring Bruce Willis, and Deep Roy (Mr. Sin) has been in just about everything including Star Wars, Star Trek, X-Files, Flash Gordon, The NeverEnding Story, and he played all of the Oompa Loompas in Tim Burton's Charlie and The Chocolate Factory.
@stuartwho
@stuartwho Жыл бұрын
John Bennett was General Finch in Invasion of the Dinosaurs,
@travisgray8376
@travisgray8376 Жыл бұрын
Don't care, The Talons of Weng Chiang is one of the best stories in the fourth doctors era. This and The Seeds of Doom are two of my favourite stories in the 4th doctors era. Love it.
@englishmidnight
@englishmidnight Жыл бұрын
Jess i think you know why the fourth Doctor was my Doctor, i was born in 69, so i saw all the series before when i was three, but have amazing memory and remember it all, Tom, was my Doctor, the longest serving Doctor, seven years, keep going, Tom has so much more.
@somthingbrutal
@somthingbrutal Жыл бұрын
my favourite line in all of Who "wouldn't want that with onions"
@BogWomble
@BogWomble Жыл бұрын
Possibly my favourite classic series story. Brilliant.
@Si_of_Earth
@Si_of_Earth 29 күн бұрын
Racist!
@BogWomble
@BogWomble 28 күн бұрын
@@Si_of_Earth Or, y'know, although the inadvertent racism is unfortunate and I don't condone it in any way, I can view it as a product of its time and enjoy the story, characters, themes, setting, sets, tone, etc, regardless.
@somthingbrutal
@somthingbrutal Жыл бұрын
when this was made, there were very few Chinese actors in equity (the actors union) and they were busy, and no equity card meant you couldn't have a speaking role, if it makes you feel better within a couple of years of this one of the chinese extras was headlining his own TV cop show on ITV
@ftumschk
@ftumschk Жыл бұрын
Was David Yip an extra in this? I thought his only Doctor Who appearance was in a future Dalek story. I won't say which, as Jess hasn't got there yet.
@somthingbrutal
@somthingbrutal Жыл бұрын
@@ftumschk had a look and i had miss-remembered
@robertgould1345
@robertgould1345 Жыл бұрын
There's a British Asian actor who said that "yellow face" made sense in the past (e.g 70s) because there wasn't a huge pool of east Asian actors in Britain at the time. If it had been done by an actual British Chinese actor, it may have been better. They may have brought something special to the role. They may have been able to play around with the stereotypes being used. As it is, the episode is a pastiche of Victorian yellow-peril fiction and the theatre, fitted into quite a compelling time travel story. When judging its merits, it would be too easy to fall into black and white morality. A more nuanced understanding is needed.
@Concetta20
@Concetta20 10 ай бұрын
Agreed.
@DonnaLang42rockglobally
@DonnaLang42rockglobally Жыл бұрын
The Doctor is dressed as Sherlock Holmes and has his choice of Watsons: Litefoot - a well-off coroner who has a housekeeper named Mrs. Hudson; and Jaggo (Mr. Henry Gordon Jaggo, if you please...) - the owner and operator of a London music hall and a bit of a self-made man. That's not meant to sell Leela short, though - she's loyal to her friend and has had several adventures with him by this time. Also, she's very observant and intelligent in her own right. The story itself is very well written, however there are certain aspects of its execution that I find problematic. Thank you for addressing those aspects in your review.
@francisbartoszewski2284
@francisbartoszewski2284 Жыл бұрын
One of my top 5 classic Who stories, I'm gonna enjoy this!
@achinton
@achinton Жыл бұрын
Very well navigated discussion at the end, Jess, no arguments from me! And you were absolutely right not to cut that bit at the end.
@frankie3041
@frankie3041 Жыл бұрын
At last! I’ve been waiting and waiting and waiting for you to get to The Talons of Weng-Chiang! This is the first Doctor Who story I ever watched all the way through as an 11-year-old and it still is perhaps my favourite, though Seeds of Doom is right up there.
@MrWepps
@MrWepps Жыл бұрын
One of my favorite Doctor Who episodes.
@Alexandrashepiro
@Alexandrashepiro Жыл бұрын
Yayyy! Henry Gordon Jago & Professor George Litefoot are Finally Here!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Yaaayyyy! One of the best Tom Baker stories! Much Loved by Just about everyone!!!!! Tom's Outfit in this is EPIC, Now you know where 11 got his Sherlock outfit in "The snowmen" Leela's Outfit...So cute! Yes, this is Possibly the most controversial Doctor Who ever! Yiu'll recognize Chistopher Benjamin (Jago) From: Inferno - Sir Keith Gold and The Unicorn and the Wasp - Colonel Hugh Rip Trevor Baxter, Forver Professor Litefoot "The Talons of Weng-Chiang" was talked about being the start of a New T.V. spin-off for Jago and Litefoot, but that never happend, Luckilly, Big Finish fixed that with 13 glorious series of The "Jago and Litefoot Audios". Which sees them encountering some other well known doctor who characters including a certain trio from "Paternoster Row".
@TimelordRick
@TimelordRick Жыл бұрын
The definition of "Problematic Fave"
@Tsuliwaensis
@Tsuliwaensis Жыл бұрын
your rant at the end... I couldn't possibly love you more right now 😄💖
@UncleMilo
@UncleMilo Жыл бұрын
One of my favorites of all the Tom Baker stories!
@GeoffFrizzell-kz3rg
@GeoffFrizzell-kz3rg 2 ай бұрын
Haha, I forgot to mention that watching in the 70s for me meant staring at a 12” b&w tv with imperfect cable signal. There was no option to rewind for evaluating “wth did I just see” unless the host decided to play a particular scene as part of the outro, at least for weeks or months later. The difference between bad yellow face and inferior background extras was negligible under those conditions. 😅
@somerandomguy2073
@somerandomguy2073 Жыл бұрын
Agree entirely with what you said at the end. I think I might skip the comments section for the next few weeks, hah! 😂
@matthewwilson6889
@matthewwilson6889 Жыл бұрын
I am so glad you didn't cut the ending hahahahahaah
@Skeezer66
@Skeezer66 Жыл бұрын
I understand your discomfort with the casting, and as a black man I get it, but I do love this story So Much! You have Sherlock Holmes, Fu Manchu, Phantom of the Opera, mixed in with what was pulp fiction (or 'penny dreadfuls') and sci fi!! The 'women as victims' trope is here, but Leela turns it around! What makes the story are Jago and Lightfoot!! Probably the most popular one story characters ever!!
@bearmascall6772
@bearmascall6772 Жыл бұрын
Ok just to clear up a few things. The terms we consider racist today were considered less racist in 1977 but also are correct dialogue for the victorian setting....... With regards to the actual casting, the important thing to know is that at this point there were NO chinese actors within Equity in the UK at the time this serial was made, and for a character to speak dialogue they had to be a member of Equity. All of the background Chinese weren't actors, they were mostly waiters from the directors local chinese restaurant, and a couple of them where chinese acrobats from a touring circus but none of them were actual actors, and none spoke english. The same problem occurred 2 years later in Louise Jamesons next project 'Tenko' where it was found there was only actually one single japanese actor in Equity and he didn't speak english. That actor was actually cast in the role of 'Sato' who only spoke english words when told them to repeat, he never understood them. Bert Kwouk who played the lead Japanese character was infact Chinese and had been signed to Equity as a direct result of no chinese actors being available for this Doctor Who story and then a need for another production straight after, and in Tenko, once again the majority of 'japanese' guards were chinese waiters from around london and not actors at all. The east Asian community in the Uk up until the end of the 1970s was almost non existant and very much limited to the small 'Chinatown' areas of cities such as London and Manchester and sadly were not welcome to mix outside of their own area.
@antonmassopust568
@antonmassopust568 Жыл бұрын
It was a different time than I really don't care what other people say about this story. I think it's a really good story and terrific. It's doctor who meets Sherlock Holmes if you don't like it. You don't have to watch it but I think it's wonderful. It has really good lines in it too especially in your part six
@Jeremy-f3s
@Jeremy-f3s Ай бұрын
It was the late 70s not 1850, it was modern times, that argument has never been valid, there's still racism now.
@Si_of_Earth
@Si_of_Earth 29 күн бұрын
@Jeremy-f3s Bore off. To anyone who likes this story: make sure you have a hard copy to enjoy in the future before the snowflake society take it offline 😉
@Jeremy-f3s
@Jeremy-f3s 28 күн бұрын
@@Si_of_Earth funny how the people who use the term snow flake are the first ones crying and whinging themselves. Stop sulking and grow a back bone you marshmallow. I didn't say this story should be cancelled, I said racism is racism it doesn't get to hide behind a time period. I don't think the story is racist cos people dont understand the term racist, just like you don't understand the term snow flake...
@ZakJordan98
@ZakJordan98 Жыл бұрын
Intro to the greatest Doctor Who spin off characters. Jago & Litefoot
@Concetta20
@Concetta20 10 ай бұрын
It’s cool that Tom also played Sherlock in a BBC TV production of “Hound of the Baskerville”. He dons the deer stalking again!
@Monster_Maker
@Monster_Maker Жыл бұрын
Beautifully put. Your reaction, your channel. I don't think it was rude at all (and I did grown up with this kind of thing on TV all the time in the UK and I love this story but that doesn't mean I don't SEE what it is either).
@GeoffFrizzell-kz3rg
@GeoffFrizzell-kz3rg 2 ай бұрын
When TV Ontario was broadcasting Doctor Who in the 70s, it was packaged as “educational“ by employing intro and outro hosts (first Dr. Dator meets Doctor Who for the Pertwee episodes, then scifi author Judith Merril for the Tom Baker episodes). Dator concentrated on the tech and made comparisons to other science fiction shows, while Merril focused on social aspects of the stories that were broadcast. I didn’t know this at the time, but TVO didn’t show Talons because Judith Merril didn’t like the yellow face casting for the story. I did see the shows on the PBS station available to me but might have benefited back then from a little enlightenment about one of my favourite Doctor Who stories. 🤷‍♂
@bugsby4663
@bugsby4663 Жыл бұрын
In those times it was seen as okay for an actor to play any role they see fit because the job of the actor is to make out to be a different character. This is not the view held by many people today. On a positive note, Chang isn't played as an offensive stereotype like Mickey Rooney is Breakfast at Tiffanys. Chang (as will be seen) is a villain but a subtle and tragic figure.
@Skeezer66
@Skeezer66 Жыл бұрын
That difference is what makes the story for me. Chang plays into the stereotypes as part of his cover, but The Doctor knows better! And this is light years from what Peter Sellars did in popular comedies of the time.
@karlmortoniv2951
@karlmortoniv2951 Жыл бұрын
Not to pick on you, but you seem nice. 🙂 To be precise, in those days it was okay for white actors to play other races. No black man played a white Iago, for example, the way many white men blacked up and played Othello, often to considerable acclaim. Maybe I’m wrong but I’d be willing to bet that a man like James Hong was never asked to don makeup and play a white farmer from Kansas in his seventy-odd years in the business. “White Chicks” had a lot of fun with this idea. That Chang is such an uncommonly well written part had to be a double edged sword for any aspiring Asian actors doing stuff in England at the time. An acquaintance once said of Laurence Olivier getting the best reviews of his life on stage as Othello a dozen years before, “There is ONE classical role that black men can play and Larry took it away from us!” Deliberately or not, the gatekeepers did their job very well, both in England and Hollywood and elsewhere for many years. Do we wipe the tapes for “Talons of Weng Chiang” and pretend it was never made? Disney acts like “Song of the South” never happened for not entirely unrelated racial concerns. Is erasing history a path we want to go down? Some do, and we’ll see what comes of it in a generation or two. I’d rather not, but I’m a white guy who’s very good at rationalizing away what offends others. Just to show where I’m coming from, I can never watch “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” again because of Mr. Yuniyoshi. My GOD, what can they have been thinking??? 😳
@bjgandalf69
@bjgandalf69 Жыл бұрын
Jess, despite my strong opinion against people getting offended by portrayals on TV and film that wouldn't necessarily fly today, I totally agree you or anyone else has the right to react in whatever way you feel about that portrayal. I also respect the fact that you can still find enjoyment in the fun and positive aspects of the teleplay and its production despite the former and that's what I and I'm sure many others are here to watch. Carry on, sister. This is your channel and you react in whatever way you see fit.
@AmyWarriorPrincess
@AmyWarriorPrincess Жыл бұрын
I remember watching this when it first came out. This is still one of my favorite, even though it has the unfortunate betrayal in it. I'm probably one of the few that still likes it.
@gregsmith7949
@gregsmith7949 Жыл бұрын
Leela basically has her own episode when she follows Chang to Greel's lair. All on her own she uses her hunter/warrior skill to track and almost take out Greel, in the meantime gaining valuable intelligence. When the Doctor rescues her from the giant rat, she's the only one who knows what's really going on. Leela is the most "bad ass" in this segment, showing that she can handle herself just fine. P.S. I got to go to China twice in the late 90s on business trips and while staying at a western style hotel, I watched parts of a movie on TV that was about the Opium Wars, and all British were played by Chinese wearing either red or blond wigs with full beards. It goes both ways.
@domsquared9878
@domsquared9878 Жыл бұрын
I mean it’s the late 70s, the “product of it’s time” argument shouldn’t really hold much water it’s a bit late for that, it’s especially absurd because there’s other Chinese characters in the story that are actually played by Asian actors it doesn’t make sense
@jmcdonald.1998
@jmcdonald.1998 Жыл бұрын
THANK YOU
@harnois75
@harnois75 Жыл бұрын
Its a pastiche of Christopher Lee's Fu Manchu it makes perfect sense.
@domsquared9878
@domsquared9878 Жыл бұрын
@@rnw2739 The snark is unreal, of course I know the difference between extras and full actors, I was just pointing out that since they went through the trouble of hiring authentically Asian extras they certainly could have found an Asian actor to take the role. I hope you don’t agree with the Talons of Wayne Chiang above (who’s doing a great job of hiding his bias) that there were no Asian actors in London at the time that could “handle” the part, if they could find Zenia Merton 15 years earlier for Marco Polo, they could have at the very least found a Korean, Japanese, etc. actor for the role. Other than that I think the sorry is fantastic, I was just saying the “product of the time argument” can’t just be taken for granted the same way as it could for Darren Nesbitt’s Tegana or Bernard Kay’s Saladin is all. Not like 1977 was a beacon of progressivism but we also shouldn’t pretend it was the functional equivalent of a decade prior. I think it’s a reasonable enough take
@harnois75
@harnois75 Жыл бұрын
And you've reached the pinnacle of Dr Who.
@gluuuuue
@gluuuuue Жыл бұрын
Also, don't get me wrong when I say this. Sarah *is* my favorite companion from Classic.. but Leela is the BEST.
@pcwkid76
@pcwkid76 Жыл бұрын
Regrettable casting aside, this is still my favorite Dr. WHO story. It introduces us to Jago and Lightfoot and features the absolutely terrifying Mr. Sin. And it's Tom at his best.
@harnois75
@harnois75 Жыл бұрын
@@thetalonsofwaynechiang Agreed. And I suspect he was cast as a nod towards Christopher Lee's portrayal of Fu Manchu. The whole story is a wonderful pastiche of all things that epitomise Victorian fact and fiction, and the gothic horror based upon it. It is perfectly put together.
@timidwolf
@timidwolf Жыл бұрын
Yeah despite how good this story is it won't ever escape that controversy, and even those involved in making it have since regretted the decisions made. I've rewatched this one before and am sure I will do again, though it's probably best to think of it as a 'look how far we've come since then' or similar. I feel it important to not ignore or try to forget these things, like the saying 'Those who forget the past are doomed to repeat it'.
@ecyor0
@ecyor0 Жыл бұрын
@@rnw2739 We're not the ones who need to have some perspective. Try stepping outside your "everyone has it out for white people" mentality for 5 minutes.
@sabalomglitz6478
@sabalomglitz6478 Жыл бұрын
​@@ecyor0but that's our WHITE PRIVILEGE ! ;)
@emeraldkoala2
@emeraldkoala2 Ай бұрын
I don't know if you still see the comments on these older videos, (I wouldn't be surprised if you stopped looking at the ones related to this story in particular) but if you ever feel like revisiting "Talons" in your own time, though obviously without the yellowface part, you could possibly look into the novelization, or an audiobook of it. Just a thought. The original televised version is a difficult watch for a lot of people due to that part of it, which is understandable, it's just a shame since it is quite a good story outside of that.
@adamsmart1075
@adamsmart1075 Жыл бұрын
I think I agree with Jess' way of viewing controversial aspects of older films and TV shows. I do hope that she mentions more of Li H'sen Chang as a character as the story goes on, as I feel that he's an very interesting character and John Bennett gives an excellent layered performance that makes him a more 3 dimensional presence in the story regardless of what the now dated make-up suggests.
@bethtidwell539
@bethtidwell539 Жыл бұрын
The problem was there was hardly any asian actors in Great Britain at the time of filiming. They would have used more asian actors had there been any available.
@markmckeown87
@markmckeown87 Жыл бұрын
@@bethtidwell539 Bruh there were literally 10 of them standing around the actor, what are you talking about
@mekonta
@mekonta Жыл бұрын
More than likely didn't have an Equity card between them, so unable to have a speaking part and that's without the factor of accomplished acting chops and gravitas factor in their capability to play a lead villain opposite the leading man, which is probably why they didn't use any of the Chinese cast for Li H'sen Chang.
@ftumschk
@ftumschk Жыл бұрын
@@mekonta Exactly. They were basically non-speaking "extras".
@Crazy-Cocoa-2.0
@Crazy-Cocoa-2.0 Жыл бұрын
Curious, what do you use to record and edit? I've been wanting to do some reactions of my own!
@danniemadsen1996
@danniemadsen1996 Жыл бұрын
This story is the only story in Classic Who that features a concept that is widely known in New Who.
@ZoomerUnion
@ZoomerUnion Жыл бұрын
What's that?
@danniemadsen1996
@danniemadsen1996 Жыл бұрын
@@ZoomerUnion can’t say it until Jess has seen/heard it for herself.
@Paul_1971
@Paul_1971 Жыл бұрын
@@danniemadsen1996 So why bring it up now then & not when the relevent episode has been reacted to?
@danniemadsen1996
@danniemadsen1996 Жыл бұрын
@@Paul_1971 because by that time it is redundant. I didn’t say what it was.
@lucasdolding6924
@lucasdolding6924 Жыл бұрын
@@danniemadsen1996 she’s finished the story already
@docwho10th88
@docwho10th88 Жыл бұрын
You really need to react to "Father Ted" for a bit of the old racism! lmao
@darrenbradley1282
@darrenbradley1282 Жыл бұрын
One of my all time favourite comedies.
@docwho10th88
@docwho10th88 Жыл бұрын
@@darrenbradley1282 Comedy GOLD!!! ha ha ...GURLS! ..DRINK!....FECK!!
@adamsmart1075
@adamsmart1075 Жыл бұрын
I hear you're a racist now, Father.
@ihateunicorns867
@ihateunicorns867 Жыл бұрын
I hear you're a racist now, Doctor. How d'ya get into that of thing?
@LiamDuke
@LiamDuke Жыл бұрын
28:15 I'm glad you didn't cut that!
@lucasdolding6924
@lucasdolding6924 Жыл бұрын
I'm glad you didn't cut that bit off at the end, it was hilarious and something people use way too often to defend something like this. I hadn't seen this story for nearly 10 years since I don't usually revisit Classic Who stories once I've seen them, so I didn't remember how bad the yellowface was and was even feeling quite uncomfortable just watching you reaction. I remember enjoying this story as it was though, so I hope you're not too put off while going through the rest of the story.
@tokublwhovian
@tokublwhovian Жыл бұрын
@@rnw2739 Mate, do you need to be put in a straight jacket? going off the handle and commenting on nearly everyone’s comments isn’t going to sway them to your side.
@tokublwhovian
@tokublwhovian Жыл бұрын
@@rnw2739 “That’s all you”? 👀 explain that further.
@tokublwhovian
@tokublwhovian Жыл бұрын
@@rnw2739 Yes, I needed something explaining (I’m disabled, bet that ruffles your feathers). I didn’t realise we all had the same brain. And, I’m a “leftie” 😉 I’m proud to be one. Why do you all have a problem with us minorities just wanting to work or literally exist? next, you’ll tell me disabilities aren’t real. They’re made up by the government or medical profession.
@BernardJKD
@BernardJKD Жыл бұрын
"I usually don't revisit Classic Who stories once I've seen them" is where your credibilty ended.
@lucasdolding6924
@lucasdolding6924 Жыл бұрын
@@BernardJKD wtf are you talking about “credibility” 😂
@whobp8
@whobp8 Жыл бұрын
Though I love this story, I agree with you 100% about the unfortunate use of "yellow face" and I assure you that you're not the only person who's uncomfortable with it. At the time of release, there was more of a protest when it was aired in Canada than when it was shown in the U.K., with TVOntario refusing to air it, but with the passage of time, criticism of that element of the production in the U.K. and everywhere has only increased. The story also features racial stereotypes and a few racial slurs. I believe Britbox now includes a trigger warning about the potentially offensive nature of the content.
@kierenevans2521
@kierenevans2521 Жыл бұрын
I gather it wasn't shown much in the 70s and 80s in Australia when the show was on repeats.
@mekonta
@mekonta Жыл бұрын
I'm the opposite of being uncomfortable with the makeup, in fact I love it because it makes it all the more creepy.
@robertgould1345
@robertgould1345 Жыл бұрын
Many of the slurs are in keeping with the Victorian time period, though it's a problem that the Doctor repeats them.
@kierenevans2521
@kierenevans2521 Жыл бұрын
@@robertgould1345 Yeah, the Doctor joining in on them is my big issue
@defanged9630
@defanged9630 Жыл бұрын
​​@@kierenevans2521 Actually, it was shown regularly in the late 70s to early 80s. The ABC would year in year out repeat "Who" from "Spearhead From Space" onwards. Only stories such as "Invasion of The Dinosaurs", with its' scrubbed first episode colour master tape and the non G rated "The Deadly Assassin" were left out. We didn't see the fourth Doctor's first return visit to Gallifrey until the late 80s, perhaps the early 90s. Memory can be a bit fuzzy. The Nine Network was still broadcasting "The Black and White Ministrel Show" in the early 80s. Television and Film production was dominated by Caucasian Men. Even a then, liberal progressive producer of that time, would probably appear regressive and out of date by today's standards. Not excusing the past or ignore wrongs, but pointing out the importance of context and that life is full of nuance and complexity. Life is rarely binary. Absolutism helps no one. P.S. I'm not accusing You or anyone here of absolutism. Just pointing out rigid thinking as a whole doesn't help with understanding. Ah, the nuance problem. Is Ones' intent properly conveyed via text?
@jonathangoodwin5609
@jonathangoodwin5609 Жыл бұрын
I don't suppose you know where I can watch the fourth doctor episodes entirely for free? Or at least somewhere I can buy them for a reasonable price?
@phantomquartz0586
@phantomquartz0586 8 ай бұрын
DailyMotion
@Allancarlostani
@Allancarlostani Жыл бұрын
I think both sides of the eternal argument over "The Talons of Weng-Chiang" are right. On the one hand, it's a great story, with a beautiful gothic horror atmosphere, great acting, great production, etc. On the other hand, it is still racist. Yellowface is wrong and the justification that "there weren't many Asian actors at the time" is offensive and misguided, considering that a few years earlier Doctor Who cast Asian actors in the story "The Mind of Evil". I think it's possible for you to like or admire this particular story and at the same time recognize its problematic and offensive aspects. And I'm really glad that Sesska did that instead of pretending it's nothing. My admiration for her only grows.
@Adam-nb6im
@Adam-nb6im Жыл бұрын
I wish more people could be as pragmatic as this.
@TheYoungDoctor
@TheYoungDoctor Жыл бұрын
Christopher Benjamin was Sir Keith Gold in Inferno and Colonel Hugh in The Unicorn and the Wasp.
@robertkramer2271
@robertkramer2271 Жыл бұрын
This is considered a really classic story. Although, it's one of those that hasn't aged well with the times. Obviously, because of the Asian stereotypes. Basically, you'll just have to enjoy it on its own merits.
@TheZodiacz
@TheZodiacz Жыл бұрын
the whole point is stereotyping- everyone is stereotyped in this story (Casey is Oirish sure and begorah) because its an homage to Sherlock Holmes, Fu Manchu and other gaslight Victorian trope. The digs at Victorian imperialist thought are quite evident.
@tommarshall4561
@tommarshall4561 Жыл бұрын
@@TheZodiacz doesn’t explain why the Doctor joins in with the stereotyping, though, does it?
@darrenbradleytwin
@darrenbradleytwin Жыл бұрын
@@TheZodiacz I guess Tom isn't aware of mimicry to fit into a social environment to get people on your side.
@the5thdoctor
@the5thdoctor Жыл бұрын
@@tommarshall4561 Maybe he was just trying to blend in with the humans. So that is why he acts and talks like them.
@AnotherScifiGuy
@AnotherScifiGuy Жыл бұрын
@@the5thdoctor Could Explain why in "Twice Upon a Time" the First Doctor makes some questionable comments. I figure he is trying to put the WW1 Captain at ease, and talking that way for his benefit.
@karlmortoniv2951
@karlmortoniv2951 Жыл бұрын
People, women in particular, disappeared a LOT back then and nobody really cared unless they were rich. Family and friends cared, but good luck getting anyone to do anything about it. Say the cabbie got to the police and carried on as he did at the theater, if the cops gave him a second thought at all they probably said the guy seemed volatile and angry and his wife probably ran off and good luck to her. Serial killers had a field day.
@thomasstevens2746
@thomasstevens2746 Жыл бұрын
My favorite tom Baker story and third favorite episode of all time Jago and litefoot is my favorite big finish series
@AnotherScifiGuy
@AnotherScifiGuy Жыл бұрын
It is a great story overall.
@thomasstevens2746
@thomasstevens2746 Жыл бұрын
@@AnotherScifiGuy oh my gosh I comment on your videos all the time
@AnotherScifiGuy
@AnotherScifiGuy Жыл бұрын
@@thomasstevens2746 I know! Good to see you Thomas! I enjoy Jess’s channel as well.
@thomasstevens2746
@thomasstevens2746 Жыл бұрын
@@AnotherScifiGuy good to see you two xxx
@markbelsom3174
@markbelsom3174 Жыл бұрын
A really good, fun story to watch, obviously based on the Jack the Ripper murders with a touch of classic Hammer Horror. A great end to season 14. And yes they could've got a Chinese actor to play Li H'sen Chang, maybe low budget or not finding the right actor led them to cast John Bennett, I really don't know.
@ftumschk
@ftumschk Жыл бұрын
There were very few, if any, Chinese actors in Britain at the time who were capable of playing a major leading role like Li H'Sen Chang. There was only really Bert Kwouk, and he was probably out of reach after hitting the big time as Cato in the Pink Panther franchise. (No disrespect to Bert, but he wasn't exactly "leading role" material either.) In fact, we had to wait until the early 1980s before a British/Asian actor emerged who was talented enough to play a leading role on British TV, and that was the young David Yip in "The Chinese Detective".
@ftumschk
@ftumschk Жыл бұрын
​@@tommarshall4561 I'm going on what Barry Letts and Terrance Dicks have said in interviews, articles and DVD commentaries. I suggest you hire a medium and direct your cocky, sanctimonious arrogance at them.
@wellington-rq2br
@wellington-rq2br Жыл бұрын
@@tommarshall4561 A few years later they needed Chinese actors for a different story. The word is the producer hired the staff at his local Chinese restaurant, because there weren't Chinese actors they could hire (as in there weren't any to be hired) - except Bert Kwouk - who in fact did get the larger Chinese role in that story.
@johntomlinson6849
@johntomlinson6849 Жыл бұрын
@@wellington-rq2br Indeed. Researcher Richard Bignell went through the spotlight directory for 1978/9 and found less than 100 ethnic actors on the books for that year. That is ethnic of ALL non-white races, all ages and sexes. That is how the UK was then and anyone who thinks differently is delusional. The pool of available talent was pitifully small.
@mekonta
@mekonta Жыл бұрын
Tom, without naming the predictable names of David Yip and Burt Kwouk perhaps you could share your extensive knowledge of the many Chinese actors out there that were capable?
@dwilborn1257
@dwilborn1257 Жыл бұрын
Christopher Benjamin was in three different Doctor Who stories and got to act with three different doctors! He was in Inferno, with Pertwee. He's Jago here with Baker. And he's the Colonel in The Unicorn and the Wasp with David Tennant. How cool is that??
@joshuajoshua2732
@joshuajoshua2732 Жыл бұрын
What pisses me off more than anything is peoples modern skewed viewed mindsets everyones going on about how racist it was it really wasnt its just an actor playing a chinese man it wasn't intended as offensive then it's sure as hell not intended to be offensive now look at it in context i notice in the comments people are more going on about the racism rather than what a great story it is. Seriously people grow up and get over it it was what it was just except it and move on learn from history not to repeat in the future don't delete it.
@colinmcdonough4034
@colinmcdonough4034 Жыл бұрын
An all time classic story on every level. Glorious stuff!! A fantastic swansong for Hinchcliffe and Holmes.
@geoffbrundell4685
@geoffbrundell4685 Жыл бұрын
You up to my favourite 4th Doctor Story Tom and Louise and guest star actors are so fantastic
@8BitBex
@8BitBex 18 күн бұрын
lol. Your face at 00:40. Yep. They're doing _that._
@clueingforbeggs
@clueingforbeggs Ай бұрын
Fun fact about the 'it was made in a different time' criticisms, regarding this story: Yeah it was a different time and this was still considered racist then. TVOntario refused to air it in Canada because it was 'dangerously offensive stereotyping associating Chinese people with everything fearful and despicable'
@Jeremy-f3s
@Jeremy-f3s Ай бұрын
I don't think the "different times" criticism was ever valid, racism is racism no matter what period of time it is, there's still racism today but we don't say it's "of the times" but it seems this story wasn't as much racist as parodying or pastiching the Fu Man Chu character, itself a totally uninformed stereotype of Chinese culture done by a guy who had zero idea about Chinese culture at all. So basically this is a cliche of a cliche and not intended to be anything more than that but the sensitive little darlings now can't handle it because everyone wants to be offended at everything and have their sensibilities appeased every two seconds.
@neptune04
@neptune04 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for acknowledging the good and the bad in this story. I know with stories like this it can at times be hard to find a balance.
@hazman68
@hazman68 Жыл бұрын
One of the best stories made of the era. Do I wish they’d cast people meeting the ethnic characters correctly, yes. But this was how it was at the time. It doesn’t make it right. But it’s how it was. Maybe as I grew up watching it (as a preteen) in the 70s I feel different than someone watching it in a 2020’s world. I would feel differently if they made it like that now. We grow and learn but we can’t change it. (See the growth in female characters through the show as well) All that being said, if you don’t like it, that’s you’re feeling and as valid as mine. I think I find it frustrating when I’m told I can’t enjoy some that l liked when I was younger as now our society has changed (even if I agree for the better).
@chrism596
@chrism596 Жыл бұрын
Jago and Lightfoot went on to get their own Big Finish series.
@jasonthayer1309
@jasonthayer1309 Жыл бұрын
Yep, and they met Tom Baker's Doctor again and the 6th one a few times too!
@markleneker9923
@markleneker9923 Жыл бұрын
That one part would be re-cast now, but it was 1977. It is a classic and terrific story and always will be!
@timaustin2000
@timaustin2000 Жыл бұрын
I ADORE this story, yellowface aside (which is, obviously, wrong). But it's so, so good.
@thatguyfromcetialphaV
@thatguyfromcetialphaV Жыл бұрын
Still one of my faves. No I don't care about the makeup, it was just the norm in the days when this was made. Ricardo Montalban, a Hispanic guy played a Sikh Indian for example. Tom Baker dressed like Holmes was fantastic.
@BernardJKD
@BernardJKD Жыл бұрын
TV greatness. It doesn't get better.
@sadako24
@sadako24 Жыл бұрын
And yet you continue to defend and praise the trash that came after.
@dmorgs07
@dmorgs07 Жыл бұрын
I think it’s one of the greatest stories… it’s just a pity about elements that would never be allowed now.
@ZakJordan98
@ZakJordan98 Жыл бұрын
Despite the racism, which is abhorrent and can not be excused. This is still one of my favourite Doctor Who stories, it's a really great and engaging gothic horror story
@frankie3041
@frankie3041 Жыл бұрын
Oh dear. So much pearl clutching…
@MalcolmWolf
@MalcolmWolf Жыл бұрын
@@frankie3041 Oh dear so much excusing of blatant racism
@Wannabe_Baby
@Wannabe_Baby Жыл бұрын
@@frankie3041 "Oh dear. So much tolerance ..."
@MalcolmWolf
@MalcolmWolf Жыл бұрын
@@rnw2739 Just because you struggle to have sincere empathy, does not mean everybody else is insincere when they see blatant racism and mention how cringe it is.
@frankie3041
@frankie3041 Жыл бұрын
@@Wannabe_Baby Oh, you’re hiding behind “tolerance”. Be quiet, fool.
@jonathanmurphy3141
@jonathanmurphy3141 Жыл бұрын
This has been considered one of the greatest Who stories ever made -and controversial, depiction of Asians, with a British actor in adapted make-up as Chang. They had like a week to film on location, for this Six Part. This was the last story made by Producer Phillip Hinchcliffe, who took on with Tom Baker. Directed by David Maloney, who had worked since Troughton’s time. Robert Holmes, wrote this, one of the greats. They went “all out” on this. Your reaction to Chang’s plan to abduct “young plump” Women -understable shock. Your discussion, after -thank you for honest truth.
@therealpbristow
@therealpbristow Жыл бұрын
It's not spelled out, but if you know the genre they're riffing from, he's talking about the popular kind of prostitutes at that time in London. And later on, sure enough there's a character who was carefully coded as "we're not actually *saying* she's a lady of the night, but... well, she is just getting home from work in the wee small hours...".
@salva_75
@salva_75 Жыл бұрын
There are very few people today who would defend the casting choice, but it's also a TERRIFIC story. Many fans have quite conflicting thoughts about this particular story. You did well to address the elephant in the room.
@cuedotfilms4427
@cuedotfilms4427 Жыл бұрын
I've always liked this story, because of its sinister atmosphere, but I totally agree with what you say about it. It's such a shame that this spoils the story. However, isn't my favourite story. My favourite story is The Seeds of Doom, which I totally loved watching your reaction to. I'm so pleased you also enjoyed it.
@daphneoram4743
@daphneoram4743 Жыл бұрын
@@rnw2739 Agree with all you say, as for the rat - although quite well made, it’s look would have been immensely improved had the production team Vaselined the whole thing from nose to tail.
@cuedotfilms4427
@cuedotfilms4427 Жыл бұрын
@@rnw2739 No, but at least I can get my tenses right.
@chrispalmer7893
@chrispalmer7893 Жыл бұрын
This actually could have been a lot less uncomfortable if they'd borrowed just a little more from the period. There was a famous magician who spent his whole career pretending to be Chinese, seemingly fooling everyone as he went right up to the point where he was accidentally shot when a trick went wrong on stage. He then spoke the first words he ever spoke in English - "Something's gone wrong" - which also turned out to be his last words... The magician here could have been that guy.
@defanged9630
@defanged9630 Жыл бұрын
And here we are. At the end of the Hinchcliffe era, with Robert Holmes brilliant Holmesian pastiche. A script that plays with Conan Doyle's tropes and makes some pointed commentary on orientalism/racism. Only to be perhaps, fatally compromised by the lazy use of yellowface. Philip Hinchcliffe has said in interviews that he and the production team should have done better and tried harder to cast a ethnically Chinese British actor. Interesting/coincidental that You post this shortly after "Everything, Everywhere, All at Once's" Oscar success. Among it's cast is the great James Hong. A brilliant Chinese American actor, who has spoken about this very issue. You are right to feel uncomfortable, but I believe the story has a lot to offer and surely open, free viewing and discussion of "difficult" or "problematic" texts is better than censorship? Banning something, shuts down the possibility of discussion and learning from past mistakes. We must look honestly at the past, as discomforting as that may be. That's how we learn to do better. Better to have content warnings, than shutting down choice?
@the5thdoctor
@the5thdoctor Жыл бұрын
Yellow face finally. 🤣🤣 Final episode of the Hinchcliffe era. Truly phenomenal episode full of twists and pure gothic horror. Tom is on the top of his game here. And this is the debut of two of the best side characters to only show up in one episode. Jago and lifeoot who would go on to have big finish audio episodes. If you enjoyed these two characters you should check out the big finish spin off
@harnois75
@harnois75 Жыл бұрын
Robert Holmes fantastic pastiche of the Penny Dreadful - a wonderful blend of Sherlock Holmes, Jack the Ripper, The Phantom of the Opera and Fu Manchu, and one could argue that the casting of the imposing John Bennett is a fairly obvious nod towards Christopher Lee's version of Fu Manchu. Anyone who bleats on about racism in a story set amongst the back street gangs of Victorian London is probably happier watching the history revisionism of more recent TV output to sooth their fevered brow. Doctor Who doesn't get any better than The Talons of Weng-Chiang.
@harnois75
@harnois75 Жыл бұрын
@@tommarshall4561 Is that what you think? Interesting. It's not what I think. So Jog on.
@tokublwhovian
@tokublwhovian Жыл бұрын
@@harnois75 “So jog on”, I thought you lot believed in free speech? I guess only when you want to be a bigot.
@harnois75
@harnois75 Жыл бұрын
@@tokublwhovian "You Lot'? You sound like the bigot.
@harnois75
@harnois75 Жыл бұрын
@@tommarshall4561 Get eating.
@Payne2view
@Payne2view Жыл бұрын
There you were, thinking that Ramposhi or Cho-chi from 'Planet of the Spiders' was offensively as a Tibetan played by a white actor. Then along comes this. 'back in the day' when I saw it as a kid, I think I remember everyone saying 'he's obviously not Chinese, that's awful make-up'. It is especially bad considering there were Chinese actors around at the time and there were plenty of actual Chinese actors playing the henchmen doing the fighting. I also remember that in the 1970s it was quite common for commedians to do yellow, brown or back face in their sketches as there was a general attitude that foreigners look and sound funny. That doesn't make it right though and "Talons" is one of the controvercial Dr Who stories, which is a pity because for the sake of employing an actual Chinese actor, this would be remembered better and able to be shown on nationa TV again.
@therealpbristow
@therealpbristow Жыл бұрын
You make good point about the times. However, simply casting a Chinese actor wouldn't fix all the problems here - The main being that the Doctor *goes along with* the racism of the Victorian characters. He didn't even need to call it out, specifically - He's a Time Lord, used to walking people from all sorts of weird time- and space-specific prejudices, but just *not join in*. Or maybe have *Leela* comment on how the Police sergeant talks about Chinese people the same way the Tesh talked about the Sevateem...
@geoffmason7215
@geoffmason7215 Жыл бұрын
Hmmmm 51st century time agents?....where have we heard that before?? (Mrs Hudson....Sherlock Holmes anyone) ...and all this story is remembered for is the OTT racism which was bad but there is also things to enjoy
@robvanriot
@robvanriot Жыл бұрын
Jess: "I don't have to react a certain way or accept that this is how things were at the time, this is my channel and my reactions are my reactions." At least twenty sweaty angry men in the comments smearing grease stains across their screens as they type: "LET IT GO THIS IS HOW THINGS WERE AT THE TIME WHY ARE YOU VIRTUE SIGNALLING"
@billabongditty
@billabongditty Жыл бұрын
Really appreciated Jess's comment on race portrayal. I first watched this at the age of 8 as a re-run in 1982 - so that's only 6 or so years after 'Talons" was made, but even in those 6 years there was already a shift in attitudes about it. Here's how my family responded: MUM: "You couldn't have a white actor playing an Asian man now". DAD: "You shouldn't have had it THEN!" So to those saying, "you've got to see it from the perspective of 'back then' " - well, that wasn't entirely the perspective. It wasn't just the fact that there was a shortage of British actors of genuine East Asian heritage, but also to play outside of one's race was seen as a tour de force for an actor (e.g. Linda Hunt as the Indonesian MALE photographer in The Year of Living Dangerously - an Oscar-winning performance that NEVER generates controversy for some reason). So please, folks, don't go assuming what was or wasn't people's perspectives 'back then'. Many wouldn't have found it uncomfortable ("I say, that John Bennett's a clever cookie playing a Chinese man") and many would have considered it highly distasteful.
@stevetheduck1425
@stevetheduck1425 Жыл бұрын
The writers and designers of this story were using research of the music halls of Britain in the 1880s. There were numerous 'Chinese' acts back then, which used stock costumes and fake make-up to exotically entertain, sometimes insensitively. There was, for example, an Englishman who performed as 'Chung-Ling Soo', and was famous for the 'catching a bullet in his teeth' act, which was a French stage-magic invention and had nothing to do with China, except that China was much in the news, with General 'Chinese' Gordon (later famous for failing to defend Khartoum). He died, shot in the neck. Even at the time of this TV show, there were exotic 'Chinese' entertainers, usually tumblers and acrobats, some of whom were even Chinese. A few years later they were replaced, after Bruce Lee and the Kung-Fu film craze, with ninjas. 'The Talons of Weng-Chiang' IMO, should have shown an Englishman pretending to be Chinese, and so giving him another identity, without the need for the faux 'yellowface' makeup it has become.
@Concreteowl
@Concreteowl Жыл бұрын
The Yellow face is regrettable but people forget how few actual Asian actors were around in the UK at that time. The few that were used were in high demand and often in multiple hit shows and films. Burt Kwouk for example who was born in Warrington to Chinese parents and most famously played Cato in the pink panther movies would sometimes also play Japanese characters as Japanese actors were even more hard to find in the UK. Now there are more diverse communities, more actors of Asian origin and people can be put on a plane something the BBC could rarely afford. The examples of racism by the characters are meant to be commentary against racism. Not only do the Chinese people experience it but Jago also throws a slur at the Irish stage hand. Even Lightfoot says some questionable things.
@MalcolmWolf
@MalcolmWolf Жыл бұрын
The previous production crew had no problem finding them, even 10 years earlier they had no problem, and other shows managed to find them at the same time also. If pushed producers could do talent scouting and advertisements if they really struggled. They could have found someone if they had looked hard enough.
@bletheringfool
@bletheringfool Жыл бұрын
I can't help but think if they had cast Burt Kwok (who was in a couple of eps of Doctor Who) a prolific British Chinese actor in the 60s 70s 80s and beyond, it would have been much more authentic. But the story itself is fantastic.
@tommarshall4561
@tommarshall4561 Жыл бұрын
@@rnw2739 David Yip? Kristopher Kum?
@MalcolmWolf
@MalcolmWolf Жыл бұрын
@@rnw2739 The story suffered because a white man decided to go yellow face. Not only is it cringe to most normal human beings, it also throws off credibility.
@ftumschk
@ftumschk Жыл бұрын
@@tommarshall4561 David Yip was only in his early/mid 20s when this was filmed, so would have been too young to play Li Hsen Chang. David Yip did get a small part in Doctor Who a couple of years later, but it would be a couple of years after that before he started playing major roles on TV. And Li Hsen Chang is definitely a major role.
@ftumschk
@ftumschk Жыл бұрын
@@tommarshall4561 They tried Kum's agency when casting The Mind of Evil, but none of the actors were good enough, so they had to resort to casting Kum himself. Not that the role he played was anywhere near as demanding as that of Li Hsen Chang. I'm not making "excuses" either, just stating facts. I lived through that time, and watched a lot of TV, so I know for a fact there were very few experienced Chinese actors active on British television. Bert Kwouk was probably the most successful, and I'm a great fan of his, but even he couldn't have held a candle to John Bennett in this role.
@bletheringfool
@bletheringfool Жыл бұрын
@@tommarshall4561 yes 2 more fine actors.
@Jeremy-f3s
@Jeremy-f3s Ай бұрын
For context it was a pastiche of the Fu Man Chu character, itself an uninformed depiction of Chinese culture based on the opium wars history in which the British tried to force the Chinese to trade in opium to which the Chinese refused resulting in war between both countries. As a result of this the Chinese were demonified and the Fu Man Chu character was born out of this. Eventually it was used as a villain character for films in the 50s and this is what the makers of Doctor Who are copying. So its a cliche of a cliche essentially, not intended at racist by the Doctor Who production, cos the Fu Man Chu character was played by a white man in films too so again they were copying that genre. Because Dr Who copies genres to come up with its variety of stories. But actors did portray other nationalities all the time back then and it had nothing to do with racism they just wanted particular names for the roles. Shirley McClaine portrays an Indian princess in Around the World in 80 Days and Robert Helpmann plays a Chinese Prince in 55 Days in Peking, neither of these roles were intended as racist.
@mark-s
@mark-s Жыл бұрын
A popular one one of my top 3 of the 4th doctor loved leela in this story
@alexfletcher5192
@alexfletcher5192 Жыл бұрын
It is true that the BBC was still running 'The Black & White Minstrel Show' (with old time blackface performers) at least into the following year and even national treasures like The Two Ronnies would do this. It was approaching a time when this was going to be questioned a lot more, but that was the context. I have perhaps more respect for people who say they weren't bothered then but have 'grown' than those who continue to hold out.
@TheBrainOfMorbius
@TheBrainOfMorbius Жыл бұрын
I love the 'your friend' part! Brilliant. Great reaction. This story was on TV regularly in Australia in the 1970s and 80s in my youth, and I don't know if it's just my innocence at the time but it didn't even occur to me that Chang wasn't played by a non-Chinese actor, which seems incredible to me now - it's immediately obvious. I love this story and I think that the production is aiming for a pastiche of Holmes/Sexton Blake/Victorian attitudes. I actually think that John Bennett's performance as Chang is a very good one, within the limits of the character he needs to play, but it is a terrible shame that that one casting decision casts such a shadow over the whole story. It's by no means the only problematic aspect of the story but it is certainly the least defensible.
@Problembeing
@Problembeing Жыл бұрын
I hear you, but I'm not hearing anything about how dwarfs are represented...
@ftumschk
@ftumschk Жыл бұрын
That thought often crosses my mind whenever "Talons" is discussed. The diminutive Indian/British actor Deep Roy playing the murderous "Peking Homunculus" Mr Sin is okay, but the Englishman John Bennett playing Li Hsen Chang is somehow the worst thing ever. How does that add up?
@Problembeing
@Problembeing Жыл бұрын
@@ftumschk you can't make a valid argument for one without extrapolating that to include all other perceived 'problematic' concerns. I don't think the intent was racist, I think for the times it wasn't perceived that way, we are applying 21st century postmodern lenses on things with modern day sensitivity. Ultimately the story and the hard work put into its production is unfairly tarnished by applying a pretty narrow spectrum of received wisdom.
@tommarshall4561
@tommarshall4561 Жыл бұрын
@@ftumschk actually Holmes’ obsession with Othering the disfigured, the disabled, those of different body types etc (including Mr Sin) IS quite often brought up - not with the same frequency but in the Black Archive academic monograph on Talons, for example, there is an entire chunk devoted to how much of an issue the fear of “disfigurement” is in such fiction and the idea that outer scarring means inner evil.
@ihateunicorns867
@ihateunicorns867 Жыл бұрын
I'd be interested to hear more on this. Mr Sin is a ventriloquist's dummy that comes to life - a standard horror trope. Right now, I can't see an ableist issue with that, but I'm aware that my privilege is probably blinding me to it rather that that meaning that there isn't an issue. Obviously the yellow-face and yellow-peril aspects of this are clearly very problematic.
@Problembeing
@Problembeing Жыл бұрын
@@ihateunicorns867 Just because it's a trope does it make it right? Does it make it wrong? Precisely my point. How many Chinese people do you know? There were Chinese actors that worke alongside him. Maybe ask them if they're still about? Thing is, some people will find it utterly offensive, others won't. Who decides? White people and our addiction to guilt? or Chinese people and by what order of ratio? We keep applying a postmodern lens on things that are now a matter of historical record. Entertainment of it's time, there to be enjoyed or despised, but there nonetheless. What do you suggest? Throwing it out compeltely? Erase it? Or enjoy it for what it is, regardless? Can you enjoy it? By what percentage should you enjoy it? 10%, 20%, 80%? I just don't know what you expect to be done about it.
@andrewbowman4611
@andrewbowman4611 Жыл бұрын
A bit of cultural context is required here, I feel. In the mid- to late-seventies, there weren't a lot of Far East Asian actors in the UK; even fewer who could carry a role such as Chang. In fact, the only one who immediately springs to mind is Burt Kwouk, who played Cato in the Pink Panther films alongside Peter Sellers. Another is possibly David Yip, but he wouldn't come to prominence until a bit later on with his title role in The Chinese Detective. Of course, it could be argued that because of the dearth of such actors, then this story shouldn't have even entered production. This is true to an extent, but it must also be realised that Chang is very much in the same vein as Fu Manchu, a character played on screen by the likes of Christopher Lee, for example. I tend to look at it as having been written for a genuine Far East Asian actor, such as Kwouk, but when he proved unable they took the ill-advised course they did. Possibly at Kwouk's suggestion: "Have you tried John Bennett? He gives good Chinese.", or words to that effect. Is it a product of its time? Very much so. Is it distracting? Clearly. However, the story itself is great, in my view. While I've never read it, I'm sure the novelisation is a much better overall experience, by and large, although there may be some language within it that's not considered appropriate in today's world, although a large portion of that could be attributed to the period in which it's set. As with the televised version, in fact.
@andrewbowman4611
@andrewbowman4611 Жыл бұрын
@@tommarshall4561 Yes, good shout. Of course, he'd already been in Doctor Who, so it's a wonder that he wasn't cast. Again, maybe that was down to availability, or maybe he just didn't have the range. He did play a lot of Chinese and Japanese characters (as if the two are interchangeable) during his career, although these were more bit parts more often than not. Of course, one of his bigger roles was in Tenko, but that came a few years later, I believe.
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