>Back home, the British actor is virtually unknown. But in China he has become a familiar face, always playing the villain who either gets killed or beaten up - defeated by the Chinese hero every single time.
>Known as Kaiwen in China, he has played a hitman in Jackie Chan's Kung Fu Yoga, and a blue monster in fantasy film Super Me.
>But he is best known in China for playing American colonel Allan D Maclean in last year's blockbuster The Battle of Lake Changjin, cementing his status as China's favourite Western bad guy.
>"I feel I've become the most sought-after foreign actor in China," Mr Lee told the BBC in a recent interview.
>The films often portray China as a world power which does whatever it takes to save its citizens, or pay tribute to revolutionary heroes who resist Western "imperialists".
>Many of these villain roles have gone to Mr Lee - helping him carve out a unique niche. Mr Lee said he is thrilled by his newfound success
It's in Mandarin. It uses AI software to translate into any language based on whoever is reading it. For me it looks like it was written in Thai. For you it's English.
Holy shit it's a joke who cares >BUT HOLLY DOESNT AKTCHUALLY CAST RUSSIANS shut your dumb fucking nerdy ass up before I fly to the philippines and rape your brown fucking cheeks and then sodomize you with a tire iron
Dominic Anderson
kek, is that yuri boyka?
Xavier Stewart
same reason marvel movies do, just cheap rubbish produced for mass appeal
Blake Peterson
I wonder if the Chinese movies are done in a Western, action movie style