Freeza Under The Shower
Member
Oh, hello.
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I have literally never heard of this movie.
Oh, hello.
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Cute video but I don't understand why people are so enamoured with it. It doesn't really offer any insight or commentary beyond "hey, this issue exists"
It needs to be talked about and addressed but I'm not sure what's so "brilliant" about this.
Cute video but I don't understand why people are so enamoured with it. It doesn't really offer any insight or commentary beyond "hey, this issue exists"
It needs to be talked about and addressed but I'm not sure what's so "brilliant" about this.
More like youre coming up with the lamest excuses possible in order to make sure any brown Persians aren't allowed to be cast. "Oh it's really about historical accuracy and that's why it's okay that the Prince is played by a white dude". Newsflash, this isn't history. It's a fantasy video game starring one of the only freaking brown dudes in the medium. But hey it's okay now, you can pat yourself on the back because Jake Gylenhaal sort of looks like a fair complexioned persian dude and that makes the casting okay.But, you see, that's the problem. Ethnic Persians are pretty white. Darker skin tone in the current population is largely the result of the Arab invasion, and other population intermixing in more modern times. What you are doing is imposing a stereotype onto the Persian people, and then being pissy when the movie does not match up with your incorrect notions.
Persians are not Indian, they are not Arab, they are not Israeli. You can't criticize them for hiring a white guy to play the role of an ancient Persian prince (who actually looks pretty fucking close to how a member of old Persian nobility would look), and then suggest people who are both ethnically and physically further off from the part you are trying to cast.
More like youre coming up with the lamest excuses possible in order to make sure any brown Persians aren't allowed to be cast. "Oh it's really about historical accuracy and that's why it's okay that the Prince is played by a white dude". Newsflash, this isn't history. It's a fantasy video game starring one of the only freaking brown dudes in the medium. But hey it's okay now, you can pat yourself on the back because Jake Gylenhaal sort of looks like a fair complexioned persian dude and that makes the casting okay.
Well you're objecting to an idea I never even mentioned so I don't even know why you bothered to respond.Where did I say a modern Persian person should not be cast? I'm objecting to the idea that it would be more appropriate to cast an Arab, Indian, Israeli, or any other stereotypical "Middle Eastern" looking person then it is to cast a white guy. Because it's not.
Well you're objecting to an idea I never even mentioned so I don't even know why you bothered to respond.
Man some of those YouTube comments, smhIt just does a good job showing the issue and gives more attention to it.
Also, I guess HBO/John Oliver noticed the popularity of the segment so they put it up on their official Youtube channel. The sound quality seems to be messed up for some reason though: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XebG4TO_xss
I have literally never heard of this movie.
I don't think you've actually played Sands of Time if youre actually saying this for realsies. Regressive, my goodness. You want to talk vapid, fucking historical accuracy? Really?I bothered to respond because your reasoning is rather vapid. The fact that the character in the game plays into racial stereotypes means that the movie inherently has to? That seems rather regressive.
I don't think you've actually played Sands of Time if youre actually saying this for realsies. Regressive, my goodness. You want to talk vapid, fucking historical accuracy? Really?
He doesn't look like an ethnically fair Persian either despite what some of you have deluded yourselves into believing. But no please continue the defense of the casting.If your problem with PoP is really that Jake Gyllenhaal doesn't look like the character in the game, then I have no idea what you are even doing in this thread, as that is certainly not what John Oliver was complaining about.
Oh, hello.
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He doesn't look like an ethnically fair Persian either despite what some of you have deluded yourselves into believing. But no please continue the defense of the casting.
Not even her first role as a mixed asian woman.
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As a Persian guy I think Gyllenhaal looks quite Persian.
My Persian family agrees.
Cool. I dont think he does, and my Persian friends don't. And it doesn't seem like John Oliver's writers think so either. Tough noogies I guess.He doesn't? Because I think he actually is pretty close, and I have never talked with any Persian people who disagree.
That is your justification for why Tom Cruise is the featured actor in a Samurai movie. Cool.
It's like. Yeah let's make a samurai movie. Yeah let's come on with a twisted scenario where we can put a white actor as lead in the movie.
I wasn't making my argument in support of the video's point. The one I was answering to claimed that there's no way The Last Samurai can be considered white-washing because of the Super Duper Deep story of the movie where a broken white person goes to be mentally/spiritually healed to a foreign land, but it can be and it's actually a pretty typical example of it. Not white-washed casting, sure, but it's still a film that glorifies a white person's role, American one's at that.That might be a decent point to make, but the video was clearly about whitewashed casting, not white-washed type of storytelling. The video basically claimed that the "last samurai" was intended to be Tom Cruise's character when it wasn't, and moreover, Tom Cruise wasn't playing a Japanese person in the movie.
Criticize the movie for what it does, sure, but not what it doesn't actually do.
I think it can still be put under the umbrella of white-washing. It's emphasizing the White Man's Important Role in some fictional or historical event, so I think it applies.This is different than whitewashing, though? Does it have a name? Hollywood often emphasizes the white protagonist in a story ostensibly about a minority. Matthew Broderick in Glory, Kevin Kline in Cry Freedom, Nicholas Cage in Windtalkers, Leonardo DiCaprio in Blood Diamond.
How do we feel about Joseph Fiennes playing Michael Jackson?
Actually I think she was just supposed to be an American visiting Hong Kong.
Yeah, those stories are kind of bullshit, though. Or at least it's bullshit that those are the kinds of stories that get told.
I always think about this random-ass quote about Avatar from the late Ryan Davis of Giant Bomb.
The story of Avatar, it's basically Last of the Mohicans, Dances with Wolves, Last Samurai, it's any of those stories. It's white colonialist fantasy, of... it's liberal guilt manifest, where it's like "I'm against my forefathers who came and pillaged your land, and I'm going to fight alongside of you, but then I'm also going to still rise to the top of you and become the best of you, because I'm still white. So you need me to embrace the best things about you while retaining my whiteness, and then using those combined forces to beat the old white people."
I'm saying why can't you just do a story that's about people in these cultures? Why does the story always have to be about some white guy coming to appreciate these cultures, as opposed to just telling a story about the people in these cultures, like they're actually human beings that have their own intrinsic value aside from making white people engage with the morality of their grandfathers?
Cute video but I don't understand why people are so enamoured with it. It doesn't really offer any insight or commentary beyond "hey, this issue exists"
It needs to be talked about and addressed but I'm not sure what's so "brilliant" about this.
Oh, hello.
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Me, too. I actually liked this movie, and I also liked Prince of Persia and The Last Samurai.I saw that movie in theaters and own it on blu ray. Not a bad flick. Jackie vs Jet Li was a nice scrap.
When a message is wrapped in humor, it helps to prevent some people from getting defensive when being shown an unpleasant truth. A video that went more in depth but without cute similes would not be well received.
It is not about looking persian, it is about stealing the roles that would only acept persian actors.
Cool. I dont think he does, and my Persian friends don't. And it doesn't seem like John Oliver's writers think so either. Tough noogies I guess.
Great clip. Avatar annoyed me the entire time I watched it for multiple reasons, but Ryan really nails it.
Why isn't anyone complaining about 300 then? They are all black and brown savages so I guess it's cool in that case.
But when you've got people in this very thread listing off Indian actors as suitable replacements to Gyllenhall, what is the difference?It is not about looking persian, it is about stealing the roles that would only accept persian actors.
Why Diversity Matters, straight from the people it affects
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/...inclusion.html?smid=tw-nytimes&smtyp=cur&_r=1
But when you've got people in this very thread listing off Indian actors as suitable replacements to Gyllenhall, what is the difference?
Indian actors for a persian role is bad ? yes... but not even CLOSE to another white star.
See, to me this idea is kinda offensive too. It's better to be LESS historically accurate in order to cast a minority that is NOT the minority the actor is supposed to be depicting?
Why Diversity Matters, straight from the people it affects
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/...inclusion.html?smid=tw-nytimes&smtyp=cur&_r=1
Oh, hello.
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Why Diversity Matters, straight from the people it affects
http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/...inclusion.html?smid=tw-nytimes&smtyp=cur&_r=1
Oliver is batting 1000 with this new show, it's quite amazing.
I like Trevir Noah but the added runtime dedicated to issues combined with the HBOness and quality of writing makes this feel like an evolved Daily Show
dayum! JJ dodge a bullet on that one*whew* glad they didn't go with Meth Damon. I like him, but every time I see him I go "THAT GUY!" Boyega is good, I wasn't like "Attack the Block!" when I saw him pop up in the trailers.
I wasn't making my argument in support of the video's point. The one I was answering to claimed that there's no way The Last Samurai can be considered white-washing because of the Super Duper Deep story of the movie where a broken white person goes to be mentally/spiritually healed to a foreign land, but it can be and it's actually a pretty typical example of it. Not white-washed casting, sure, but it's still a film that glorifies a white person's role, American one's at that.
Most of these movies flopped, so it's not like the white public in general supports this notion of "whitewashing", it's the studios and directors choices, not the audience.