"Saint Seiya", think that the purple dragon represents Chinese culture? In fact, his image is a Chinese hooligan

2020/07/0809:08:07 entertainment 961

For the purple dragon of the Xiaoqiang Draco in "Saint Seiya", maybe some people still think that he is a Chinese at the beginning or until now, but in fact, in "Saint Seiya" In Seiya, there are not many real Chinese characters. Except for Tong Hu, Chun Li and Wang Hu, there are probably no real Chinese characters in the original biography.

In terms of the original work, in fact, the five bronze Xiaoqiangs such as Seiya and Zilong are half brothers, and their father is also the famous species in "Saint Seiya" Macheng To Masamitsu, and Shiroto Masamitsu’s sons are not just five bronze Xiaoqiangs, but there are more than one hundred sons. These one hundred sons also form the "Hundred Sons Sacrifice" in the Christian legend. This disgusting setting was later changed in the animation version to that Seiya and others were orphans for the orphanage, but it can be regarded as a clear proof that the five unkillable Xiaoqiangs are all Japanese devils.

Of course, the devil is a devil, but when the devil also wears our Chinese Tang suit, it looks no different from us Chinese, especially the purple dragon of Draco. If you don't deliberately think of it, most people will treat him as Chinese.

Because the Zilong of Tianlong Zodiac was sent to Wulaofeng on Mount Lu to learn from his childhood, his image design and personality are also quite Chinese, especially his That hand "Lushan Shenglongba" directly highlighted the Chinese flavor on his body.

However, when we all think that the image of the purple dragon represents the image of China, in fact, we all forget that the image of the purple dragon in "Saint Seiya" rests on In reality, the proper one is the image of a Chinese hooligan: modern Chinese men don’t have long hair at all. Men with long hair are almost equivalent to unscrupulous hooligans in people’s minds, and the dragon on Zilong The same is true for tattoos. The tattoos on the back may not be easily known, but in modern China, the proper thing is the behavior of gangsters. Who would tattoo a serious Chinese? It’s hard to find a proper job after getting tattooed...

So, sometimes you really don’t take the settings in "Saint Seiya" as the same thing. At the time, even the author Cha Tian Zhengmei couldn't figure out what the positive image of the Chinese was.

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