The character was conceived in late 1972 by writer
Steve Englehart and artist
Jim Starlin. Marvel Comics had wished to acquire the rights to adapt the
Kung Fu television program, but were denied permission by
Warner Communications, who was also the owner of Marvel's primary rival,
DC Comics. Instead, Marvel acquired the comic book rights to
Sax Rohmer's pulp villain
Dr. Fu Manchu. Englehart and Starlin developed Shang-Chi, a master of
kung fu, who was introduced as a previously unknown son of Fu Manchu. Though an original character himself, many of Shang-Chi's supporting characters were Rohmer creations. Starlin left the series after #17 (replaced by Paul Gulacy) and Englehart after #19 (replaced by
Doug Moench). No characters from the
Kung Fu television series were officially included in the comic series, though in the #19 issue the character Lu Sun bore such a strong resemblance to
Kwai Chang Caine that to avoid copyright issues, the character was given a mustache throughout the issue. With artist
Paul Gulacy, Shang-Chi's visual appearance was modeled after that of
Bruce Lee. According to Englehart, his name was influenced by his study of the
I-Ching, composed of
升 (shēng) meaning "ascending" and
chi meaning vital energy. Shang-Chi first appeared in
Special Marvel Edition #15 (December 1973). He appeared again in issue #16, and with issue #17 (April 1974) the title was changed to
The Hands of Shang-Chi: Master of Kung Fu. Amidst the martial arts craze in the United States in the 1970s, the book became very popular, surviving until issue #125 (June 1983), a run including four giant-size issues and an annual. In the comics, Shang-Chi is raised by his father
Dr. Fu Manchu to be the ultimate assassin for the would-be world conqueror. After learning Fu Manchu's evil nature, Shang-Chi swears eternal opposition to his father's ambitions and fights him as a force for good. As the result of Marvel later losing the rights to the Rohmer estate, Fu Manchu was later renamed
Zheng Zu. Starlin, who was previously unfamiliar with Fu Manchu until
Larry Hama informed him of the
racist nature of the Rohmer novels, attributed his early departure from the series due to his embarrassment over the revelation. In the 2015 "
Secret Wars" storyline, a version of Shang-Chi resides in the
wuxia-inspired
K'un-Lun region of
Battleworld. In this continuity, he is the exiled son of Emperor Zheng Zu, master of the Ten Rings, a ruthless martial arts clan that uses mystical powers and techniques based on
the powers of the Mandarin's ten rings from the
mainstream continuity. In the
main continuity, the Mandarin had a son called
Temugin who was trained in a monastery in martial arts and
philosophy, his name is inspired by the real name of
Genghis Khan, ancestor of the Mandarin. According to
Margaret Loesch, former president and CEO of
Marvel Productions, in the 1980s
Stan Lee approached
Brandon Lee to play Shang-Chi for a movie or television series starring the character. In 2001, a Shang-Chi film entered development at
DreamWorks Pictures but after failing to materialize by 2004, the rights to the character were reverted to Marvel. In 2004, David Maisel was hired as chief operating officer of Marvel Studios as he had a plan for the studio to self-finance movies. Marvel entered into a
non-recourse debt structure with
Merrill Lynch, under which Marvel got $525 million to make a maximum of 10 movies based on the company's properties over eight years, collateralized by certain movie rights to a total of 10 characters, including Shang-Chi. Following the successes of
Black Panther and
Crazy Rich Asians (both 2018), Marvel fast-tracked development of a
Shang-Chi film, hiring
David Callaham in December 2018 to write the screenplay and
Destin Daniel Cretton to direct in March 2019. Cretton also contributed to Callaham's screenplay.
Chinese Canadian actor
Simu Liu, who had previously expressed interest in the role, was cast as Shang-Chi in July 2019, which was publicly announced by Cretton and
Kevin Feige days later, along with the film's full title to be
Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings. After he was cast, Liu was called by Feige, saying that Liu's life was "about to change", having previously petitioning for the role since December 2018. == Characterization ==