Films (movies, if you prefer) often show interaction between people from different cultures, and they can be a great resource for anyone interested in studying or teaching intercultural communication. They don't show reality, of course, and in earlier times commercial films more often got other cultures wrong than they got them right. In addition, they often had an ideological axe to grind.
That hasn't changed completely. Modern films also tend to have a political message that they want to put across. But two things are a little different today. Firstly, there is now a greater commitment among film-makers to go for ethnographic consistency and accuracy. Secondly, there are more directors who are interested in intercultural situations. This may be because they themselves come from a culturally mixed or different background, but often it is because they are aware of the potential in an intercultural plot for exciting conflict, subtle interaction between characters, and the poetry, magic and colour of the unfamiliar.
these comments introduce the work of the Intercultural Film Database at the U of Hildersheim in Germany. Dozens of films are reviewed/analyzed for their intercultural characteristics and specific descriptors as used by the intercultural communications field.

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