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Also the fact that Kamen Rider Amazons came out in 2016, but didn't get a subtitled release on Amazon Prime in the US until 2018 and the lack of publicity probably is the reason why it didn't get the same attention like Squid Game got. If you're going to bring up Kamen Rider Amazons on Prime Video, then maybe I should bring up Netflix's Alice in Borderland, which came out a year before Squid Game and had a similar plot like Squid Game. Again: Why did Alice in Borderland on Netflix not get the same mainstream attention when it came out on Netflix last year despite the plot being similar to Squid Game? If Alice in Borderland was a Korean-language Netflix drama rather then Japanese, would that have gotten more spotlight because of the K-drama popularity? Again, there's accusation from fans of Japanese pop culture saying that if these Japanese dramas/toku had been speaking in Korean, then the US media would be giving them more attention in a way missing white women get. If you're asking about why did Kamen Rider Amazons on Prime Video didn't get the same attention like Squid Game got, then I'm going to drag Alice in Borderland into this too. Also, a person on Twitter (this tweet was shared by Jake Adelstein, a famous US reporter who specialize in Japan) shared on Twitter about how Squid Game's global success in the US and outside of Asia has made some Japanese upset and probably jealous. Now I don't have an article that can validate this tweet or this fact, but then again when Parasite became the first Korean film to win best picture at the Oscar last year, Japanese folks & filmmakers were not happy with it. I hate to say this again and again: but it's not subtitle that is turning off people in the US and in the west from watching tokusatsu, it's something else. Probably the stereotype of toku being made for kids/youth audience (which I don't dispute). I don't know, but Legend Hero didn't seem to get K-drama fans to watch the show despite the sci-fi/fantasy K-dramas that is starting to come out for the last few years. I can back this up because this Variety article seem to confirmed what maybe some of toku fans that watched foreign-language TV dramas have long suspected: Variety article: 'Acapulco’ Shows the Power of Multilingual Programming and Growing Subtitle Acceptance Among U.S. Viewers Mashable article: Subtitles are the future. Sorry, caption haters So clearly subtitles is not the one turning off people from tokusatsu. |
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go away bro |
Here we go again.
*grabs popcorn* |
I'm surprised this thread isn't already locked yet.
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Yo, mods, you wanna uh, do something?
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Stop resurrecting this thread, all you're doing is screaming into the void now.
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Just what the heck is this thread lol. And I gotta wonder what the original poster macblo thinks of all of this.
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I think there someting wrong with mdo7
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