Well it makes sense, the modern form of aliens is from American mythology. It's like complaining that all the spottings of the Loch Ness monster are around Loch Ness
I’ve had Americans argue with me saying that what I was talking about doesn’t happen in America and that I don’t know what I’m talking about, when I made it abundantly clear that what I was talking about was irrelevant to the US as a whole.
What I really hate is when I want to buy something from a website that was linked from a US Youtuber and the only place that hints that they only ship to the US is that you can only select US states in the checkout.
Happened to me multiple times, its not that hard to list the places you ship to in your FAQ.
Transformers, I forget which one. I don’t know where that pyramid could be, but it’s starring an American teenager, American Special Ops, and an American navy ship. I think there’s also American AirForce.
They need a placeholder for New York that is actually just a portion of Vancouver where they do their battles, chases, investigations and conversations.
I see this criticism a lot and I just wonder how many films from outside the US people have seen because this kind of thing happens in pretty much every country that makes films. The film will usually take place in and feature heroes from the country that made it. Like most Godzilla movies take place in Japan and the day is saved by Japanese people (or Godzilla himself depending on the movie).
It's true for a lot of these minor complaints about America. Of course there are valid complaints about the US, but some of them are very petty and not a real representation.
"American food quality is bad" because you go to fancy restaurants on vacation, and/or when visiting the US don't know where to find quality food because it's in different places.
"but quality food is cheap" yeah when you have to pay half as much or less for labor it can be
"people are less fat because the food is healthier" no, people are less fat because they are addicted to cigarettes instead of soda. also walk more.
"america has no culture" ... this should be obvious
"Americans are so loud" this very much depends on the country you're comparing too, but at least where I've lived Germans, Dutch, and locals(Czechs) are the loudest
And movies about aliens made by Americans are probably gonna have the aliens landing in America, because shocker, Americans know America better than other places
Attack the Block is a goddamn masterpiece.
(Aliens try to invade earth, land in a South London ghetto, are fought off by its residents. Starring John Boyega)
Edge of Tomorrow completely tossed most of this habit to the side and at worst didn't suffer for it, but imo was incredible because of it. One can only see The Statue of Liberty, the Golden Gate Bridge, NYC, etc so many times before it gets old. The Louvre? Flooded and full of aliens? That was new.
Quick, we need an American version of Initial D. Swap the 86 for an f350 dually, the water cup with a gallon soda jug, and the tofu shop with a Krispy Kreme.
Not just movies. Sci-fi series also have a heavy tendency to base their stories in/on the US.
Like Stargate SG-1, filmed around Vancouver and considered an American-Canadian show while having Canada completely irrelevant. At least they got better with Stargate Atlantis and the international team. I consider Rodney McKay and Radek Zelenka heroes.
There is also Farscape that was filmed in Australia and is loosely international, as Crichton is an "international" astronaut but he's still American.
The only sci-fi series that I know is taking place outside of the US is Continuum. Everything is revolving around Vancouver.
This is a bit reductive. You could add in Alaska (blue filter, remote military base, etc...) and Mexico (yellow filter, foreign land, grungy dusty bar).