傅满洲
维基百科,自由的百科全书
傅满洲博士是一个虚构的人物。他是来自满洲的一个邪恶天才,最早是出现在二十世纪早期的伯明翰作家萨克斯·罗莫 (本名亚瑟·萨斯福德·沃德,Arthur Sarsfield Ward)所写的一系列小说里。
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[编辑] 人物性格
The Insidious Dr. Fu Manchu
A master criminal, Fu Manchu works for the overthrow of Western civilization or the "White race." His murderous plots are marked by the extensive use of apparently Asian methods; he disdains guns or explosives, preferring dacoits, phansigars, and members of other secret societies as his agents armed with knives, or using "pythons and hamadryads... fungi and my tiny allies, the bacilli... my black spiders" and other peculiar animals or natural chemical weapons. The most prominent of his agents is the "seductively lovely" Karamaneh. Fu Manchu's daughter, Fah Lo Suee, is a devious mastermind in her own right, plotting to take control of the Si-Fan from her father and making things difficult for him.
Opposing Fu Manchu are Commissioner Sir Denis Nayland Smith and Dr. Petrie. They are in the Holmes and Watson tradition, with Dr. Petrie narrating the stories while Nayland Smith carries the fight, combating Fu Manchu more by doggedness and determination rather than any intellectual brilliance (except in extremis). Nayland Smith and Fu Manchu have grudging respect for each other, as each is from the old school where a man keeps his word even to an enemy.
According to Cay Van Ash (a friend and biographer of Sax Rohmer, who wrote his own authorized pastiches Ten Years Beyond Baker Street and The Fires of Fu Manchu) "Fu Manchu" was a title of honor, which meant "the Warlike Manchu." It was thought that the character had been a member of the Imperial family who backed the losing side in the Boxer Rebellion. In the earliest books, Fu Manchu is an assassin sent on missions by the Si-Fan, but he quickly rises to become head of that dreaded secret society. At first, the Si-Fan's goal is to throw the Europeans out of Asia; later, the group attempts to intervene more generally in world politics, while funding itself by more ordinary crime.
[编辑] 文化影响
The character of Fu Manchu has become controversial as an example of racism found frequently in Western representations of the Chinese at that time.[1] The character is often associated with the Yellow Peril. Manchu has inspired numerous other characters, and is the model for most villains in later "Yellow Peril" thrillers.[2] Examples include Pao Tcheou, Yellow Claw, Dr. Azimn, Ming the Merciless from Flash Gordon, Li Chang Yen from The Big Four, James Bond adversary Dr. Julius No, and Iron Man foe the Mandarin. Fu Manchu is also one of the earliest known examples of a supervillain, with Professor Moriarty being among the only other precedents.
[编辑] 书籍
- 《阴险的傅满洲博士》 (The Insidious Dr Fu Manchu) (1913年出版)。这是一组原本在杂志上出版的短篇合集,第一篇名叫《扎亚特之吻》 (The Zayat Kiss),曾于1912年在《故事大王》 (The Storyteller) 上面刊载。
- 《傅满洲博士归来记》 (The Return of Dr Fu Manchu) (1916年出版)。
- 《傅满洲的手》 (The Hand of Fu Manchu) (1917年出版)。
- 《傅满洲的女儿》 (Daughter of Fu Manchu) (1931年出版)。
- 《傅满洲的面具》 (The Mask of Fu Manchu) (1932年出版)。
- 《傅满洲的新娘》 (The Bride of Fu Manchu) (1933年出版)。
- 《傅满洲的踪迹》 (The Trail of Fu Manchu) (1934年出版)。
- 《傅满洲总统》 (President Fu Manchu) (1936年出版)。
- 《傅满洲的鼓》 (The Drums of Fu Manchu) (1939年出版)。
- 《傅满洲之岛》 (The Island of Fu Manchu) (1940年出版)。
- 《傅满洲之影》 (The Shadow of Fu Manchu) (1948年出版)。
- 《傅满洲的愤怒》 (The Wrath of Fu Manchu) (1952年出版)。
- 《傅满洲再现》 (Re-Enter Fu Manchu) (1957年出版)。
- 《傅满洲皇帝》 (Emperor Fu Manchu) (1959年出版)。
[编辑] 其他媒体
[编辑] 系列电影
Fu Manchu first appeared on the big screen in the 1923 British film serial The Mysteries of Fu Manchu starring Harry Agar Lyons. Lyons returned to the role the next year in the creatively titled The Further Mysteries of Fu Manchu
In 1929 Fu made his American film debut in The Mysterious Dr. Fu Manchu starring Warner Oland, best known for his portrayal of Charlie Chan.
Fu Manchu returned to the serial format in 1940 in Republic Pictures' Drums of Fu Manchu, a 15-episode serial considered to be one of the best the studio ever made which was later released as a feature film in 1943. Republic had wanted to do a second serial Fu Manchu Strikes Back, but the State Department persuaded them to refrain from doing so because China was a war-time ally against Japan.
[编辑] 独立电影
Warner Oland would portray Fu Manchu three more times after appearing in The Mysterious Dr. Fu Manchu: in The Return of Dr. Fu Manchu (1930), the first feature film based on the character, in 1931s Daughter of the Dragon which starred Anna May Wong as Fu's daughter, and in a Paramount on Parade studio revue segment.
However, the most famous early incarnation of the character is probably The Mask of Fu Manchu (1932) starring Boris Karloff. It is often considered the best of those produced in the 1930s.
Other than an obscure 1946 Spanish film El Otro Fu Manchu, Fu was absent from the big sceen for about twenty five years, until Hammer Studios began a series starring Christopher Lee in 1965. Hammer and Lee would make one Fu Manchu film per year through the end of the decade: The Face of Fu Manchu (1965), The Brides of Fu Manchu (1966), The Vengeance of Fu Manchu (1967), The Blood of Fu Manchu (1968), and finally The Castle of Fu Manchu (1969)
His last major film appearance was The Fiendish Plot of Dr. Fu Manchu, a 1980 parody starring Peter Sellers as Fu.
[编辑] 电视
Fu Manchu was first brought to television in NBC's 1952 short film The Zayat Kiss starring John Carradine. It was intended to be a series of mystery films starring the character, but only this one was made.
In 1955-56 Hollywood Pictures (a subsidiary of Republic Pictures) produced a 13-episode syndicated programme, The Adventures of Fu Manchu starring Glenn Gordon and directed by noted serial directer Frank Andreon.
[编辑] 广播
Fu Manchu earliest radio appearances were on the Collier Hour 1927-31 on the Blue Network. This was a radio programme designed to promote Colliers magazine and presented weekly dramatizations of the current issues stories and serials. Fu was voiced by Arthur Hughes. A self titled show on CBS followed in 1932-33. John C. Daly, and later Harold Huber, played Fu.
Additionally, there were "pirate" broadcast from the Continent into Britain, from Radio Luxembourg and Radio Lyons in 1936 through 1937. Frank Cochrane voiced Fu Manchu. The BBC produced a competing series, The Peculiar Case of the Poppy Club starting in 1939. That same year The Shadow of Fu Manchu aired in America.
The last Fu Manch radio series The Insidious Dr. Fu Manchu aired in 1944 on NBC.
[编辑] 连载漫画
Fu was first brought to newspaper comic strips in a black and white daily strip drawn by Leo O'Mealia and ran from 1931 to 1933. The strips were adaptations of the first two Fu Manchu novels and part of the third. They were copyrighted by "Sax Rohmer and The Bell Syndicate, Inc."
[编辑] 漫画书籍
Fu Manchu made his first comic book appearance in Detective Comics # 17, and continued, as one feature among many in the anthology series, until #28. These were reprints of the earlier Leo O'Mealia strips. Original Fu stories in comics had to wait for Avons one issue The Mask of Dr. Fu Manchu in 1951.
Ironically, in most of Fu's more substantial comic book appearances he has been either unnamed or given a pseudonym. In the 1970s, Fu Manchu appeared as the father of the character Shang-Chi in the series Shang-Chi, Master of Kung Fu. However Marvel Comics soon lost the rights to the character, so in later appearances, Fu Manchu is never named, only referred to as Shang's 'father,' and never shown out of shadow. In a recent Black Panther storyline, he is referred to as "Mr. Han", apparently a play on the name of the main villain in Enter the Dragon.
Fu Manchu appeared, but only as "The Doctor," in Alan Moore's comic book series The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. Moore did not have the copyright to use the character by name, but is generally considered to have done very well in spite of this.
Fu Manchu and his daughter are the inspiration for the character Hark and his daughter Anna Hark in the comic book series Planetary.
[编辑] 在流行文化中
- Kim Newman's novel Anno Dracula includes a character known as "The Chinaman," who is an unnamed Fu Manchu.
- 'Fred' Fu Manchu was a character in various episodes of The Goon Show, acting in various villainous roles. He also received a self-titled Goon Show episode, Fred Fu Manchu and His Bamboo Saxophone where he planned, and succeeded to "finish Britain [off] as a saxophone-playing nation".
- The Fu Manchu stories were parodied in the the radio series Round The Horne, with "Dr. Chu N. Ginsberg, MA (failed)" played by Kenneth Williams. ISBN 0-563-40991-6
- Don't Fool With Fun Manchu is the name of a song from the 60s by The Rockin' Ramrods
- Fu Manchu is the name of a ska song by Jamaican singer Desmond Dekker.
- Fu Manchu is a Southern Californian stoner rock band. Formed in 1987.
- Tim McGraw's "Live Like You Were Dying" contained a broncing bull named Fu Manchu.
- The villainous Chinese character Doctor Julius No in Ian Fleming's 1958 James Bond novel "Doctor No," was based on Fu Manchu, and Fleming often cited Sax Rohmer as an inspiration.
- In Kurt Vonnegut Jr's book Slapstick, Fu Manchu is the name of the miniaturized Chinese head of state.
Fumanchu is the name of a popular bodyboarding surf brand sporting kung fu type symbols.
[编辑] 倾听文章
[编辑] 相关条目
- Xenophobia
- Sinophobia
[编辑] 外部连结
- The Page of Fu Manchu
- The Insidious Dr. Fu Manchu by Sax Rohmer
- The Return of Dr. Fu Manchu by Sax Rohmer
- Dr Hermes Reviews reviews of all the Fu Manchu books as well as those featuring Sax Rohmer's other criminal mastermind, Sumuru
- A database and cover gallery of Fu Manchu comic book appearences