I'm not all militant about avoiding the movie, but I think it's an irritating misnomer to call it 'The Karate Kid' when it clearly appears to be about someone learning Kung Fu in order to achieve strength, harmony and balance in his life.
The principles are the same, but calling the movie'The Karate Kid' is just inaccurate.
How about this? Just call it 'The Kung Fu Kid' and somewhere in the credits, just credit it as being 'Based on the motion picture 'The Karate Kid.'' I don't see the problem with just doing that. It acknowledges the fact that the plot is lifted from another movie but it honors the cultural differences between Karate and Kung Fu.
Perhaps the most surprising thing is that there is such a strong pervading Chinese presence in this movie and yet all of these people are content to be in a film that inaccurately labels the martial discipline being taught in it. It just feels like cultural ignorance to me, and in this day and age it feels wrong to just excuse it because 'it's just a movie.'
I'm sure a lot of Asians resent things like 'alllooksame.com.' Why should it be all right for the movie industry to be so ignorant for the sake of making a buck off of a wave of nostalgia? Just seems like the respectful thing to do would be to give it an appropriate name.
I'll still see it eventually, however. Whether at normal price, at the discount theater or on DVD, I intend to watch it at some point. Jackie Chan has great screen presence in whatever he's in and it's always fun to see him up on the screen interacting with other actors. The Forbidden Kingdom remains one of the most entertaining and flat out FUN movies I've ever seen despite it's unadulterated penchant for cinematic schlock.