Wolf Warrior Ii (战狼2) And The Manipulation Of Chinese Nationalism Direct
Released in 2017, Wolf Warrior II (Zhan Lang II) became the highest-grossing film in Chinese history at the time, signaling a decisive shift in state-media-audience dynamics. This paper argues that the film does not merely reflect a pre-existing popular nationalism but actively constructs and manipulates a specific, state-aligned form of "assertive nationalism." By analyzing the film’s narrative structure, character archetypes, and reception context, this study explores how Wolf Warrior II serves as a tool for re-legitimizing the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) by displacing domestic anxieties onto a hostile international stage. The paper concludes that the film’s success marks the maturation of a "propaganda-entertainment complex," where commercial cinema is repurposed to manufacture consent for an increasingly muscular foreign policy. 1. Introduction In 2017, a low-budget Chinese action film featuring a former special forces soldier rescuing civilians from an African warzone shattered box office records, grossing over $870 million worldwide. Wolf Warrior II (dir. Wu Jing) became a cultural phenomenon, but its significance transcends commercial success. The film introduced the phrase "Whoever offends China, no matter how far, will be punished," which became a viral nationalist slogan. Critics and scholars have since debated the film’s role in what they term the "manipulation" of Chinese nationalism.
The Embodied Militant: Wolf Warrior II and the Mainstreaming of Assertive Nationalism in Chinese Cinema Released in 2017, Wolf Warrior II (Zhan Lang