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Chinese names
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DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorWinston Smith
Don't be discommodious
Registered: March 13, 2007
United States Posts: 21,610
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I think you are missing my point. I am saying THIS is where we start, Point A, to get to Point B requires documentation to support Point B. It also means that, IF you are going to go to Point B from the outset then DOCUMENT it from the outset. Point A allows ALL users to enter the data in an easy manner with no extra knowledge needed. Point B requires documentation at whatever point it is utilized. We are allowed to deviate from CLT results IF we can document that CLT results are not correct, this seems a natural for that purpose.

Unfortunately those that wish to bow to culture do not recognize many things.

For example, imagine yourself being Joe Six Pack in a theater and you see the following On screen

John Wayne
Chow Yun Fat

What do you, Mr. Six Pack, see.

Do you see

Wayne John
Yun Fat Chow

I think not.

Is there anything displayed On Screen that delineates ANY kind of difference between the two individuals...NO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

So all I am saying is here is where we start and any movement beyond that point requires documentation. Is it perfect...probably not. Does it work? Yes. Does it make it easy for ANY user to enter data? Yes. Would any other possible system tend to discourage and dishearten  data entry by those without the specialized knowledge? Probably, which makes for a bad answer?

I have said this a number of times. EVERY actor has as part of his contract the way in which he will be credited for his work on the film. Chow Yun Fat, while being normal for Asian culture, is NOT normal for Western culture, since he is appearing in a film which is Western based in one way or another, shoulkd he not require trhat his credit be handled in a way consistent with the culture in which his credit is read. Similarly in an Asian film Wayne John would be more appropriate than John Wayne. This is merely a devil's advocate discussion, but one which I believe puts a bit of a lie to the Cultural argument.

Skip
ASSUME NOTHING!!!!!!
CBE, MBE, MoA and proud of it.
Outta here

Billy Video
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile RegistrantStar Contributorschizzzo
Registered: March 20, 2007
Germany Posts: 78
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Quoting skipnet50:
Quote:
I have said this a number of times. EVERY actor has as part of his contract the way in which he will be credited for his work on the film.


I'm sorry but I saw credits where the actor is credited in different ways in the same end credits (for example Zoe and Zoë).

Quote:
Chow Yun Fat, while being normal for Asian culture, is NOT normal for Western culture, since he is appearing in a film which is Western based in one way or another, shoulkd he not require trhat his credit be handled in a way consistent with the culture in which his credit is read. Similarly in an Asian film Wayne John would be more appropriate than John Wayne. This is merely a devil's advocate discussion, but one which I believe puts a bit of a lie to the Cultural argument.


The way names are credited depends not on the culture where the film (credits) come from, it depends on the culture background where the actor come from. I saw a couple of credits in this way:

FAMILY NAME given name (asian/hungarian actor)
given name FAMILY NAME (western actor)
given name FAMILY NAME (western actor)
FAMILY NAME given name (asian/hungarian actor)
FAMILY NAME given name (asian/hungarian actor)
given name FAMILY NAME (western actor)
FAMILY NAME given name (asian/hungarian actor)
 Last edited: by schizzzo
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar Contributornorthbloke
Registered: March 15, 2007
Reputation: High Rating
United Kingdom Posts: 5,459
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I agree, the culture the film is made in has no bearing on the way someone's name is written - the culture of the person does that.

However I agree with Skip's argument that by reversing the name we make it a lot harder to contribute as we would need to document that that is how someone's name is supposed to be parsed.

I still believe the better way to deal with these names is to parse them as seen on screen, but have some sort of checkbox telling us that the family name is in the first name field and so on. That way, rather than having to update all the profiles involved we simply have to update the person once in our database and it would spread through the database the same way the BYs do.
Hopefully Ken would also be able to change the sorting so that it also took into account this checkbox.
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile RegistrantStar Contributorschizzzo
Registered: March 20, 2007
Germany Posts: 78
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Quoting northbloke:
Quote:
I still believe the better way to deal with these names is to parse them as seen on screen, but have some sort of checkbox telling us that the family name is in the first name field and so on. That way, rather than having to update all the profiles involved we simply have to update the person once in our database and it would spread through the database the same way the BYs do.
Hopefully Ken would also be able to change the sorting so that it also took into account this checkbox.


Full ACK
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar Contributornorthbloke
Registered: March 15, 2007
Reputation: High Rating
United Kingdom Posts: 5,459
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Quoting schizzzo:
Quote:
Full ACK

Not sure if that's a good thing or a bad thing - what's it mean? 
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar Contributorsynnerman
Take me with you. Please.
Registered: March 13, 2007
United States Posts: 736
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What is really irritating me about this argument is that only a few of the participants have any stake in this issue.  As someone with more than 1500 Asian titles, it has a bit more meaning for me than people who have a dozen or so and won't run into this problem.  The fact that people want to make me do at least double the work to satisfy some odd idea that parsing should be different for other countries is ludicrous.

According the posters here, we need to create a common name that isn't a common name at all!  For example, I'll bet you that the films that have credited Chow Yun-Fat as Yun-Fat Chow can be listed on one hand -- if at all!  So we are creating a common name that doesn't exist.  As for the credit lookup system, it's useless when it comes to Asian titles.  The majority of them are IMDB clones.  I should know, since in the very early days (before voting or the rules were around), I used to contribute them!  But the odd thing is that according to some here, I wouldn't be able to fix them properly using the proper names.

And speaking of parsing, you may find the same actor parsed in multiple ways.  Sticking with Chow Yun-Fat, we could see:

Chow/Yun/Fat
Chow/Yun-Fat
Chow/Yun Fat
Yun/Fat/Chow
Yun-Fat/Chow
Yun Fat/Chow

Since there's no standard, the names are all over the place.  Plus, it requires someone to know which is the family name and which is the given name.  It might be easy for someone famous to even Westerners, like Chow Yun-Fat, but what about an actor with a name like Wang Li (or should that be Li Wang?)  Two common family names.  Are we supposed to reverse every actor we see on screen, then use the "as credited" system to correct the names to what they show on screen?  Why the hell should we double the work of entering cast and crew just to satisfy someone's need to have the family and given names put in Western order?  That might not be a big deal you out there with only a few releases, mostly big titles from Region 1, but it would be a nightmare to me with obscure titles from all over.

It amazes me that there were arguments on here that Korean films that had the English title printed on their covers should be listed under its phonetic interpretation of the Korean characters in that locality (despite the English title present), but that we should alter the names for cast and crew in that country to reach some Western standard.  On those same DVDs, no less.

This is why I won't regularly contribute cast and crew for Asian titles anymore.  For example, I entered the full cast and crew for the recent Johnnie To film "Mad Detective" in my own database.  The existing profile was incomplete, missing several names in both cast and crew.  But due to its use of these so-called "common names" I would have to justify my changing of actors under these ridiculous "swaps" to their proper names, adding a lot more work to a simple profile change.  So it sits locally.

And if it goes the way many in this thread want it to, these updates will remain local.  And it is a shame, since there are very few of us actually contributing Asian titles.

My last plea is to just make it simple like the rest of the world: What is on-screen should be what is in the profile.  If the actor is Chow Yun-Fat, it should be Chow/Yun-Fat.  The rules can than be specified to deal with the major issues, like the "English" name issue (i.e. Tony Leung Chiu-Wai, Tony Leung Ka-Fai, etc.) or the parsing of two given names (should be used in the second field, since the names are one whole name, like someone who only goes by Billy Joe).  Otherwise, count me out.  Life's too short.  This is supposed to be a hobby, not work.

More to say, but I realize that I shouldn't get as irritated as I am about this issue, so I think I'll end my rant here.
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorBroven
I am Jack's cold sweat.
Registered: May 9, 2007
United States Posts: 254
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Quoting northbloke:
Quote:

I still believe the better way to deal with these names is to parse them as seen on screen, but have some sort of checkbox telling us that the family name is in the first name field and so on. That way, rather than having to update all the profiles involved we simply have to update the person once in our database and it would spread through the database the same way the BYs do.


I do like this idea, but I think in practice it wouldn't be quite as simple as you suggest.  Using Gong Li as an example, you could easily hit the check box and it would be as you say.  But there are still 97 profiles that were entered already as Li Gong.  Granted, some of these may be instances of "Credited as Li Gong", but I doubt that all of them are.  So wouldn't the linking be broken between the actor entry Gong Li (reversed name checkbox selected) and Li Gong (no checkbox selected)?  Difficult to explain what I mean...
"I can picture in my mind a world without war, a world without hate. And I can picture us attacking that world because they'd never expect it." - Jack Handey
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar Contributornorthbloke
Registered: March 15, 2007
Reputation: High Rating
United Kingdom Posts: 5,459
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I think I know what you mean, but I think it's no more a problem than we currently have with some Harrison Fords having a BY and others not. Yes, eventually those profiles that have a common name of Li//Gong would have to be changed eventually, but as it stands now they're still not linked to the profiles where she's known as Gong//Li, so we're not breaking anything by introducing this, we're just trying to create a consistent way of dealing with these names so it makes it easier to link them.
Maybe a tool could be written for those who have parsed them differently, so they can flag all affected names and reverse them and tick the box en masse? Save them from having to re-do their database.
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile Registrantkdh1949
Have Gun Will Travel
Registered: March 13, 2007
Reputation: High Rating
United States Posts: 2,394
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Quoting schizzzo:
Quote:
The way names are credited depends not on the culture where the film (credits) come from, it depends on the culture background where the actor come from. I saw a couple of credits in this way:

FAMILY NAME given name (asian/hungarian actor)
given name FAMILY NAME (western actor)
given name FAMILY NAME (western actor)
FAMILY NAME given name (asian/hungarian actor)
FAMILY NAME given name (asian/hungarian actor)
given name FAMILY NAME (western actor)
FAMILY NAME given name (asian/hungarian actor)

Would you provide this example of credits with real names instead of FAMILY NAME given name?  I seriously doubt there are many (any) films out there which identify the whether the actor is asian/hungarian or western.  All I have ever seen is a list of names - actors on one side, roles on the other.  When the names are Western-European in origin it is easier to determine given from family name.  But with asian/hungarian it's difficult for the untrained US eye to tell which is which.  (How in the world would I know that Chow is the family name and Yun Fat is the given one?  Except when the actor is famous or recognizable, it'd be nearly impossible to know.)

OFF TOPIC:  Does anyone know why Japanese and Hungarian grammar/word order are closely related?  Was there some cross-pollination between the cultures over the decades so that the languages are similar?  In a Japanese history course I took I learned how the language structures were similar, but not how that happened unless by sheer coincidence.

ON TOPIC:  The basic problem as I see it is that when faced with a credit list for the first time when most of the names are not "familiar" to the person doing the profile, that profiler will have to make certain assumptions as to what name goes where and how it's parsed.  As many people have pointed out, the Rules aren't real clear in providing a way to do this.  The "As credited" part is easy:  if the credit reads "CHOW YUN FAT" that's what you enter "Chow Yun Fat".  But without specific knowledge about the particular actor, the movie producer, or more precisely the person who "typeset" the credit list, it's going to be hit or miss for the "Common Name" side.  I fear that unless and until there are a whole lot more Asian films in the online database the Credit Lookup feature isn't going to be much help.
Another Ken (not Ken Cole)
Badges? We ain't got no badges. We don't need no badges. I don't have to show you any stinking badges.
DVD Profiler user since June 15, 2001
DVD Profiler Desktop and Mobile RegistrantGraveworm
Registered: April 7, 2007
United Kingdom Posts: 357
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Quoting schizzzo:
Quote:
There are a lot of arguments pro First name=given name, last name=family name and none against.

Well except how do we name a field that is actually the last name? To say it always means family name will cause this problem. Also the last name of lot of Chinese Actors is actually the last name of their nickname phrase and makes no sense back to front. Where they do use their correct names it's much better to sort on the last name since there will be a lot less repetition.
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar ContributorKulju
Registered: March 14, 2007
Finland Posts: 2,337
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Quoting kdh1949:
Quote:
(How in the world would I know that Chow is the family name and Yun Fat is the given one?  Except when the actor is famous or recognizable, it'd be nearly impossible to know.)


Notorious IMDB seems to handle these pretty well
DVD Profiler Unlimited RegistrantStar Contributordee1959jay
Registered: March 19, 2007
Reputation: Highest Rating
Netherlands Posts: 6,014
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Quoting kdh1949:
Quote:

OFF TOPIC:  Does anyone know why Japanese and Hungarian grammar/word order are closely related?  Was there some cross-pollination between the cultures over the decades so that the languages are similar?  In a Japanese history course I took I learned how the language structures were similar, but not how that happened unless by sheer coincidence.


I don't know of any particular Japanese-Hungarian crosslinks, but I remember to have heard that the Hungarians descend from a steppe people of Asian origin (related to the Huns) called the Magyars ("Hungary" in Hungarian is Magyarország).
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