The Chinese title of the film is "厉害了, 我的国" (pinyin: lìhaile, wǒde guó roughly translates to "Amazing, My Country"), and derives from the online slang expression "厉害了,我的哥", meaning "bravo, my brother", often used by several official social media accounts of state organizations like the Communist Youth League of China.[4]
Huajian Group, a Chinese shoe making company hiring thousands of workers in Ethiopia, was portrayed in the film as a model of "introducing China's experience of prosperity to Africa." According to a report of the Associated Press, however, the company's Ethiopian workers complained about low wages, the lack of safety equipment, forced labor and not being permitted to form a trade union.[7]
The documentary ends with a song performed by pop singer Sun Nan.[8]
The film was screened in a theater in Macao from May 9 to May 14, 2018.[13]
Reception
Douban, the leading film review website in China, disabled the commenting and rating functions on the film's page, instead showing a "media rating" of 8.5/10 and reviews written by state media including Xinhua and the People's Daily.[4][8][14] In 2018, the Cyberspace Administration of China requested the Chinese branch of its owner, Amazon, for the film to be removed from IMDb because of the bad reviews. Shortly after the request, some negative reviews disappeared. Amazon denied that it removed the bad reviews at the request of the Chinese government.[15]
Internationally, it is widely considered to be a propaganda film, and an effort by the Chinese Communist Party to increase its soft power.[7][8][16] The film also is believed to be a significant step towards a personality cult of Xi Jinping by some observers.[8][16][17] While Amazing China does demonstrate a new level of sophistication in state propaganda, along with other self-congratulatory representations of China's growth "betrays an unshakeable anxiety about the continuing legitimacy of CCP rule."[18]