A curious cultural tremor is shaking the Lion City. The runaway success of a Chinese blockbuster in Singaporean cinemas has ignited a fierce debate about national identity, while simultaneously casting a spotlight on the ebbing tide of British cultural influence in Southeast Asia. The film, a sprawling historical epic that has grossed over S$12 million locally, represents more than a commercial triumph; it is a signal of tectonic shifts in soft power alignments.
For decades, the Anglosphere, and particularly British cultural exports, held a privileged position in Singapore's media landscape. From the BBC World Service to the works of Shakespeare and the quintessential British crime drama, these imports were not merely entertainment. They were threads in the fabric of a nation that, post-independence, consciously adopted English as its lingua franca and looked to the West for models of governance, education, and cultural reference points. The British Council, with its promotion of English language and arts, was a fixture. British qualifications were gold standard.
Yet the data now paints a different picture. A 2023 survey by the Institute of Policy Studies found that among Singaporeans aged 18 to 35, only 23% considered British cultural products as 'very influential' in their lives, down from 41% in 2015. Over the same period, the influence of Chinese cultural products rose from 18% to 37%. This is not an isolated statistic. It is a trend line.
The box office numbers for the Chinese film are a dramatic point on that graph. The movie's narrative, centred on a chapter of Chinese history that resonates with themes of diaspora and resilience, has struck a deep chord with Singapore's ethnic Chinese majority, who comprise over 74% of the population. But the response has been far from uniform. A vocal segment of the public, particularly those from minority ethnic groups and younger Singaporeans educated in a more globalised context, have expressed discomfort. They see the film's popularity as evidence of an accelerating 'cultural sinicisation' that threatens the multiracial, multicultural compact that defines Singapore's post-1965 identity.
Online forums have been alight with arguments. Some argue that celebrating Chinese heritage is natural and that Singapore has always been a hybrid culture. Others counter that the Chinese government's increasing cultural assertiveness, including soft power initiatives like the Confucius Institutes and state-supported media, risks turning Singapore into a cultural satellite of Beijing. The film's success, they say, is a Trojan horse.
This identity crisis is occurring against a backdrop of Britain's own struggles to maintain its soft power footprint. Austerity and Brexit have led to cuts in the British Council's global operations, including in Asia. The BBC's World Service, once a near-ubiquitous presence in Singaporean households via shortwave and then FM, now competes with a plethora of digital alternatives from China Global Television Network (CGTN) to Al Jazeera. British universities, while still prestigious, face increased competition from American, Australian, and even Chinese institutions for Singapore's top students.
The implications are significant. Soft power is not an abstract concept; it translates into economic and diplomatic leverage. When Singaporean students choose to study in Beijing over London, when they watch Chinese dramas instead of British period pieces, and when they turn to Chinese news sources for international perspectives, the long-term alignment of Singapore's interests shifts accordingly. For Britain, this is a wake-up call. The cultural reservoir it once held in Singapore is draining, not because of a hostile takeover, but because of benign neglect and the sheer gravitational pull of China's economic and cultural rise.
For Singapore, the challenge is to navigate this new cultural geography without losing its soul. The film's success need not be a threat. It could be an opportunity to re-examine what it means to be Singaporean a nation forged in the crucible of multiple civilisations. But this requires a deliberate, data-informed strategy from policymakers to maintain a cultural equilibrium. Letting market forces alone dictate cultural flows is a recipe for drift. And as any physicist knows, a system left to entropy will find its lowest energy state, not necessarily its most stable one. The question for Singapore is whether it can maintain its unique orbit between East and West, or whether it will be pulled inexorably into one sphere of influence. The box office data is not just a number; it is a centre of gravity.







