Lila Fukushima joins Ghost in the Shell live-action movie released in 2017

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Japanese model and actor Rila Fukushima joined the DreamWorks live-action film "Ghost in the Shell" (Ghost in the Shell), which was criticized for allowing whites to play Asian roles .

Lila Fukushima joins Ghost in the Shell live-action movie released in 2017 - Lujuba

Fukushima Lila Rila Fukushima

Lila Fukushima joins Ghost in the Shell live-action movie released in 2017 - Lujuba

​​"Wolverine" stills

Lila Fukushima joins Ghost in the Shell live-action movie released in 2017 - Lujuba

"Green Arrow" Katana

Lila Fukushima joins Ghost in the Shell live-action movie released in 2017 - Lujuba

Scarlett Johansson as Motoko

Beijing time May 26 news, according to foreign media reports, Japanese model, actor Fukushima Li Rila Fukushima joined "Ghost in the Shell". She once played the role of Wolverine's "personal bodyguard" Xuesheng in "Wolverine 2" and also starred in the katana in the DC comic American drama "Green Arrow". She is also featured in "Game of Thrones" and other works. The film has been criticized for allowing white people to play Asian roles in the original. The protagonist Motoko of the original is played by Scarlett Johansson. The cast of the film also includes Michael Pitt, Juliet Binoche, Kitano Takeshi, etc., directed by Rupert Sanders, director of "Snow White and the Hunter", and will be released in North America on March 31, 2017.

Fukushima Lila is a well-known Japanese model. In 2004, she became famous for the D&G catwalk. After that, she appeared in many movies. Among them, "Wolverine 2" and the American drama "Arrow" are her most famous masterpieces by international fans. From the play road, Lila Fukushima mainly focuses on beating women. 25 years ago, Japanese manga artist Shiro Masamune began serializing "Ghost in the Shell" in "Weekly Young Magazine". In 1995, the animation industry "geek" Mamoru Oshii adapted this sci-fi comic into an animated film and put it on the big screen, the film achieved unprecedented success. In 2010, DreamWorks hoped to adapt this animation into a live-action movie, but progress was slow.

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