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Why do Americans hate Angelina Jolie?

The movie Invincible, directed by Hollywood movie star Angelina Jolie, will be released in North America at Christmas. I didn't expect this World War II movie to be boycotted in Japan before it was released. Some Japanese right-wingers accused the film of exaggerating the abuse suffered by the protagonist during his capture by the Japanese army, and even called for "blocking" Julie in Japan. Invincible is a true story, adapted from Laura Hillenbrand's best-selling novel. This novel is based on the real personal experience of American pilot Luis Zamperini during World War II, and is regarded as "an inspirational masterpiece that touched America". Zamperini is the first generation descendant of Italian immigrants from California. He showed his talent for long-distance running at an early age. When he was 9 years old, he represented the United States in the Berlin Olympic Games. 194 1 After the Pacific War broke out in, Zamperini joined the US Air Force. On a mission, his fighter plane unfortunately crashed into the sea. After floating on the life raft for four days, he and two companions were captured by the Japanese army and tortured in the prison camp until the end of the war. Zamperini, the prototype of the film's protagonist, died in July this year at the age of 9. This is a film about survival, resistance, redemption, dignity and hope through personal fate, but it has become a thorn in the side of Japanese right-wingers because of Zamperini's real experience of being captured. They expressed their dissatisfaction with Invincible on social media and online chat in China, demanding that the Japanese boycott the film and "ban" director Julie. Hiroshi Takeuchi, a right-wing cleric, claimed that Julie should study history and lied that the executed Japanese war criminals were charged with "political crimes" instead of violence and torture. He also told the Associated Press that the original description of "cannibalism" in Japanese prison camps "absolutely does not exist". This is not the first time that some experts and scholars believe that invincible has obviously touched the sensitive nerves of the Japanese right wing, which will naturally make them angry with China's corruption, and then become angry from embarrassment. "None of them have seen this film …" said Roland Keltz, a Japanese cultural expert and journalist. This is not the first time that Japan has boycotted Hollywood movies that touch sensitive topics. In 2009, the American documentary "Dolphin Bay", which showed the bloody scene of killing dolphins in Taiji Town, Japan, won the Best Documentary Feature Film Award in the Second Academy Awards, which attracted global attention and attracted protests from some Japanese fishermen, resulting in pressure on the film when it was released in Japan.