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Taylor Townsend Issues Apology For Chinese Food Remarks

by jummy84 September 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Taylor Townsend has issued an apology after her comments about Chinese food sparked reactions on social media. The athlete’s response comes shortly after folks accused her of being culturally insensitive.

RELATED: Taylor Townsend Responds After Jelena Ostapenko Balmes Language Barrier For US Open Remarks (VIDEO)

Taylor Townsend Apologizes After Mocking Exotic Buffet Dishes

Recently, Taylor Townsend shared videos on Instagram apologizing for previous remarks about the food in China. NBC News reports that Townsend is currently in the Chinese tech hub of Shenzhen for the Billie Jean King Cup finals. For context, Taylor posted videos on her IG Story questioning some of the food displays at a buffet, which she revealed included bull frogs and soft-shelled turtles.

Reactions to her comments has caused Townsend to take accountability. She also said she enjoys traveling and doesn’t take her career for granted.. Still, she admitted there’s no excuse for her words.

“The things that I said were not representative of that at all and I just truly wanted to apologize. There is no excuse, there is no words. For me, I will be better.” Taylor said.

Here’s What Taylor Said About The Food In China

Before Taylor apologized, she posted several videos on social media sharing her shock and concern after seeing the food in China. Some of the dishes included turtle, sea cucumber, and bull frogs. While showing the meals, she added a caption to one video writing, “This is the craziest thing I’ve ever seen… and people eating this.” She continued, “Imma have to talk to HR… because what the hell… turtle and bull frog is wild.” 

Social Media Weighs In On Taylor’s Response

Folks over in The Shade Room’s comment section said they didn’t think Taylor needed to apologize, they believed she had a right to express her feelings about the food. Others gave her props for admitting she was wrong. See some of their reactions below.

Instagram user @perditafelicien wrote, “Good for her for saying sorry. She meant no harm.” 

Instagram user @simplychristac wrote, “I wish people would start standing on business when they say something. I couldn’t be famous because I’m not apologizing for nothing. I’d be like NeNe ‘I said what I said!’”

While Instagram user @officiallyroyaltayy wrote, “I would be canceled asff if I was a celebrity man😂” 

Then Instagram user @suavfit wrote, “I hate that the world is so sensitive nowadays.”

Another instagram user @rnc_marr wrote, “I couldn’t be famous cause I wouldn’t apologize to nobody😂😂💯”

Instagram user @_vonthegod_ wrote, “Apologize for what???? Girl take this down.” 

While another Instagram user @dali_j_ wrote, “People are too sensitive 🙄” 

Then another Instagram user @skimmya wrote, “Apologize for WHAT!???? 🤦🏾‍♀️ Not liking the damn food🙄” 

Finally, Instagram user @therealdjnitti wrote, “STOP APOLOGIZING !!!!” 

RELATED: Taylor Townsend Claims Jelena Ostapenko Said She Has “No Class, No Education” During US Open Clash (VIDEO)

What Do You Think Roomies?

September 19, 2025 0 comments
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Gory Official Trailer for '731' WWII Bacterial Warfare Chinese Thriller
Hollywood

Gory Official Trailer for ‘731’ WWII Bacterial Warfare Chinese Thriller

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Gory Official Trailer for ‘731’ WWII Bacterial Warfare Chinese Thriller

by Alex Billington
September 9, 2025
Source: YouTube

“Behind the hypocrisy lies a whitewashed massacre.” Well Go USA has revealed a horrifying new official trailer for a Chinese film titled 731, also known as Evil Unbound telling the shocking true story of the awful Japanese Unit 731 at the end of WWII in China. This opens in theaters in the US & in China in a few weeks. Set against the backdrop of the bacterial experiments conducted by the Japanese Imperial Army’s Unit 731 in Northeast China, and reveals the crimes of Unit 731 through the turbulent fate of an ordinary individual. Based on true events during WWII in Northeast China, an ordinary man is thrust into a horrible fate during the inhumane experiments conducted by the Japanese’s notorious Unit 731. Starring Wu Jiang, Zhiwen Wang, Naiwen Li, Qian Sun, and Ziye Lin. Even though this “full” trailer is only 60 seconds, it’s intensely terrifying & disgusting. It almost seems like an exaggerated horror movie version of this story, even though they’re trying to say this is all real & this is what it looked like. Which is indeed quite horrible.

Here’s the official US trailer (+ poster) for Linshan Zhao’s thriller film 731, from Well Go’s YouTube:

731 Movie Poster

You can watch the teaser trailer for Linshan Zhao’s thriller film 731 right here for the first look again.

The story of the Japanese Army’s Unit 731 in Harbin’s Pingfang District on the eve of victory in the War of Resistance in 1945. Under the guise of “water supply & epidemic prevention,” this nefarious unit carried out bacteriological warfare research and slaughtered civilians through human experimentation, exposing many crimes against humanity. Through the tragic ordeal of innocent civilians such as street vendor Wang Yongzhang—who were deceived, captured, imprisoned, and reduced to inhumane subjects of live experiments, the film depicts the suffering, awakening, and indomitable resistance of ordinary people in the torrent of war. 731, also with the English title Evil Unbound, and titled 731: 生化启示录 or 疯狂731 in Mandarin, is written and directed by Chinese filmmaker Linshan Zhao, director of the film The Assassins with Chow Yun-Fat previously, though not much else since then. It’s produced by Hong Wang, Zhuang Yan, and Wang Zhang. Well Go USA will release Linshan Zhao’s 731 film in select US theaters at the exact same time as it opens in China – starting on September 19th, 2025 coming soon. Anyone curious to watch this?

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Find more posts in: Foreign Films, Horror, To Watch, Trailer

September 10, 2025 0 comments
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Chilling WWII Bacterial Warfare Chinese Thriller '731' Teaser Trailer
Hollywood

Chilling WWII Bacterial Warfare Chinese Thriller ‘731’ Teaser Trailer

by jummy84 September 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Chilling WWII Bacterial Warfare Chinese Thriller ‘731’ Teaser Trailer

by Alex Billington
September 8, 2025
Source: YouTube

“A dark chapter that should never be forgotten…” Well Go USA has revealed a chilling first look teaser for a Chinese film titled 731, also known as Evil Unbound telling the shocking true story of the awful Japanese Unit 731 at the end of WWII in China. Yet another new film from China about how horrible the Japanese Army was – which makes me worried they’re trying to get Chinese people to hate Japanese again. Which is not okay. Set against the backdrop of the bacterial experiments conducted by the Japanese Imperial Army’s Unit 731 in Northeast China, and reveals the crimes of Unit 731 through the turbulent fate of an ordinary individual. Based on true events during WWII in Northeast China, an ordinary man is thrust into a horrible fate during the inhumane experiments conducted by the Japanese’s notorious Unit 731. Starring Wu Jiang, Zhiwen Wang, Naiwen Li, Qian Sun, and Ziye Lin. This packs in quite a bit of unsettling footage in only 15 seconds! This is a seriously effective teaser. This looks terrifying! Stay tuned for the full trailer soon.

Here’s the US teaser trailer (+ two posters) for Linshan Zhao’s thriller film 731, direct from YouTube:

731 Movie Poster

731 Movie Poster

The story of the Japanese Army’s Unit 731 in Harbin’s Pingfang District on the eve of victory in the War of Resistance in 1945. Under the guise of “water supply & epidemic prevention,” this nefarious unit carried out bacteriological warfare research and slaughtered civilians through human experimentation, exposing many crimes against humanity. Through the tragic ordeal of innocent civilians such as street vendor Wang Yongzhang—who were deceived, captured, imprisoned, and reduced to inhumane subjects of live experiments, the film depicts the suffering, awakening, and indomitable resistance of ordinary people in the torrent of war. 731, also with the English title Evil Unbound, and titled 731: 生化启示录 or 疯狂731 in Mandarin, is written and directed by Chinese filmmaker Linshan Zhao, director of the film The Assassins with Chow Yun-Fat previously, though not much else since then. It’s produced by Hong Wang, Zhuang Yan, and Wang Zhang. Well Go USA will release Linshan Zhao’s 731 film in select US theaters at the exact same time as it opens in China – starting on September 19th, 2025 coming soon. Anyone curious to watch this?

Share

Find more posts in: Foreign Films, To Watch, Trailer

September 9, 2025 0 comments
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A24 English Dub of Chinese Animated Epic Is Good, Not Great
TV & Streaming

A24 English Dub of Chinese Animated Epic Is Good, Not Great

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

In a year that’s proven a bit soft at the box office, the biggest story (and just plain biggest film, period) is the monstrous power of “Ne Zha 2,” a Chinese CGI animated feature that, during its theatrical release in January, utterly annihilated the likes of “Fantastic Four,” “Superman,” and even “A Minecraft Movie” to become the highest global earning film this year. The competition isn’t tight, either: with $2.2 billion grossed so far, it has an absurd $1.2 billion lead over “Lilo & Stitch” and is the fifth highest-earning movie ever, no qualifications needed.

“Ne Zha 2” isn’t the first Chinese film to challenge Hollywood productions in terms of success, with the country having established itself as a highly important market for global productions. But its sheer impact still heavily outpaces any other Chinese film ever made. By comparison, the second-highest-grossing Chinese film of all-time is 2021’s “The Battle at Lake Changjin,” which “only” grossed a lowly $913 million. Even more impressive is “Ne Zha 2” managed to make all that money with barely any help from North American markets: the movie received a limited eight-week U.S. release by CMC Pictures in February, where — per Box Office Mojo — it managed around $20 million.

SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER, John Travolta, 1977

Which is where A24 comes in. With U.S. audiences still largely ignorant of what exactly “Ne Zha” is, the indie distributor acquired the rights to the film and gave it a glossy English dub for a second introduction to the market, complete with an IMAX rollout to better appreciate the film’s stunningly detailed backdrops and fight scenes.

What unsuspecting viewers will find at the theater is a film that’s not really anything like the animated films Hollywood produces: glossy and operatic in its scale, “Ne Zha 2” has a mammoth 150-minute running time that’s longer than expected for the average kids’ attention span (or the average attention span of a TikTok-rotted adult brain, to be frank). But in its emotional viewpoint and its streak of gleeful potty humor, “Ne Zha 2” is also quite blatantly a movie for children. The closest comparison to make isn’t Pixar’s “Elio” or Disney’s “Zootopia,” but the world of battle Shonen anime like “Dragon Ball Z” or “Naruto,” long shows characterized by excitable teen boys engaging in nonstop, over-the-top brawls with their own specialized power sets.

Like many products of this genre, “Ne Zha 2” can occasionally veer on the numbing, its barrage of setpieces blending in together into one amorphous blob. But at the same time, you can’t help but admire the sheer scale of the canvas director Yang Yu (alternatively credited as Jiaozi) uses to paint, and the often jaw-dropping artistry and detail of the animation speaks for itself.

NE ZHA 2, (aka NEZHA: MO TONG NAO HAI), 2025. © CMC Pictures / Courtesy Everett Collection
‘Ne Zha 2’Courtesy Everett Collection

As its title makes clear, “Ne Zha 2” is a sequel, and anyone who hasn’t taken the time to study up on the original 2019 “Ne Zha” is going to inevitably be a bit confused by this one, which starts with a very brief recap of the first movie, but nonetheless plunges the audience directly into this fantasy version of China with little context or effort to handhold. For American audiences this will inevitably jar, given how much the characters and story takes inspiration from the 16th-century novel “Investiture of the Gods” and various mythological and folk figures from Chinese history. After an opening that starts immediately after the first film introducing the titular Ne Zha and his best friend Ao Bing as spirits whose bodies need to be rebirthed, followed by a massive war sequence between characters just introduced, you would not be forgiven for getting a headache trying to keep up.

Once the movie slows down, the uninformed are able to ease more readily into the plot of the film. The first movie covered the story of how Ne Zha — a foul-mouthed, raccoon-eyed, rebellious youth who was born to demon hunters as the feared reincarnation of a demon orb — befriended the serene, properly mannered Ao Bing. In “Ne Zha 2,” master Taiyi Zhenren recreates their bodies, only for Ao Bing to lose his body in an attack from the dragons — led by the main villain, the sniveling but sympathetic Shen Gongbao — who mistakenly attack their hometown under the belief he is dead. With Ao Bing’s spirit now in Ne Zha’s body, the two manage a truce with dragons to venture to the land of the heavenly Chan sect and complete three tasks that will grant them immortality and restore Ao Bing’s body.

That journey to and through the divine world is long, and a plot synopsis in a review can’t really capture all of the characters and moving parts to this tale. There’s just too much of it. At 2 hours and 24 minutes, the movie sags in pacing, with a protracted first act to get to the real meat of things that could use a serious edit, jokes that linger a second too long, and fight scenes that drag to the point that you sometimes lose the emotional stakes of the story. The sheer amount of toilet humor — there’s a lot of mucus, snot, and jokes about people drinking piss stuffed into one film — often proves more annoying than fun.

Luckily, things click into place when Ne Zha begins his trials, and the tension between using Ao Bing’s greater power to win and remaining true to his own misfit self begins to wear at him. It’s also the point in which the often bratty, off-putting character clicks into place, and his simple desire to be accepted and prove his worth emerges as the real emotional heart of the story. The other characters emerge as complex figures rather than stock archtypes, as the Chan sect holds obvious secrets and biases towards demons while Shen Gongbao’s hidden soft side comes to light.

Most importantly, the trials gives “Ne Zha 2” a framework to showcase some of the most impressive and vibrant 3D animation that has been seen on film in quite some time. The product of roughly 138 Chinese companies and around 4,000 individual animators, “Ne Zha 2” looks vibrant and alive in every frame, striking an unusual balance between anime-inspired exaggeration and realism that works shockingly well in practice. The environments — from the white jade walls of the Chan sect palace to the dusty town of talking bandit moles that Ne Zha begins his trials in to the rushing waterfall where he fights a shapeshifting water demon — are astonishingly ornate and detailed, while the characters that inhabit them are creatively imagined and varied, from cartoonish old fat men to dragons with scales that shine like they’re truly alive.

Then there’s the action, which melds influences from anime, wuxia, and good old-fashioned “Looney Tune” pratfalls to create some jaw-dropping setpieces that zig and zag in new directions; you never know how a brawl will resolve or what a character will do next, and that unpredictability allows for real exhilaration. The climax, an operatic conflict that manages to successfully merge emotion with spectacle in a way the rest of the film sometimes struggles with, is a particular feat. In one stunning shot, two hordes of warriors on rival sides of a conflict are seen from afar, like two waves crashing into each other. And yet, the detail, attention, and artistry of every pixel in frame is very evidently displayed. In many respects, watching “Ne Zha 2” feels akin to viewing the “Avatar” films, as the film provides a visual experience that’s the absolute peak of what its medium is capable of.

It also benefits from a solid dubbing effort that gratifyingly features a mostly Asian cast and a absence of stunty A-list gets. The sole exception is Michelle Yeoh, who’s appropriately warm and heartbreaking as the title character’s mother Lady Yin. The rest of the cast is mostly unknowns or professional voice actors, including Crystal Lee and Aleks Le, a winning double act as Ne Zha and Ao Bing. Occasionally, the dialogue doesn’t quite match up with the character’s mouth flaps, but it’s a minor distraction in a mostly seamless experience.

All dubbing inevitably invites a debate over whether or not it’s necessary or if English speakers should learn to appreciate subtitles, but “Ne Zha 2” has a good case for why it’s necessary. When a movie is as stuffed with detail and action as this, better to make sure the audience has their eyes on the whole screen rather than just a tiny third of it.

Grade: B

A24‘s “Ne Zha 2” is currently playing in theaters.

Want to stay up to date on IndieWire’s film reviews and critical thoughts? Subscribe here to our newly launched newsletter, In Review by David Ehrlich, in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the best new reviews and streaming picks along with some exclusive musings — all only available to subscribers. 

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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