Hollywood purgatory is fucking scary.
Remember this?
This was actually a pretty huge hit. Disney followed up with a Rock family comedy soon after.
Hollywood purgatory is fucking scary.
Remember this?
I mean, there's just a wide general gap in opportunity for white actors vs. black actors at all levels of stardom.
But when you get this specific with it, it seems to cease being a productive conversation. Half this thread is arguing semantics because this argument is so narrow and difficult to quantify on precise terms.
Was Ryan Reynolds building steam before Deadpool? Was his opportunity that rare? Was his career ever in the dumps? etc. etc. etc.
I think this is the wrong point to argue anyway. Reynolds comeback is sort of unprecedented and rare putting race aside anyway. Deadpool's success was weird and unexpected by Fox when they greenlit it.
He's always been notable but nowhere near A list. I mean 10 years ago if you adked around a lot of people would know who he is or have at least heard the name. Jame Foxx is in the same position. Dudes never had a break out but a lot of people know who he is.
The black Ryan Reynolds is Tyrese
http://annenberg.usc.edu/pages/~/media/MDSCI/CARDReport FINAL 22216.ashxWe also assessed charactersÂ’ racial/ethnic identity. Of those speaking or named characters with enough cues to
ascertain race/ethnicity (n=10,444), 71.7% were White, 12.2% Black, 5.8% Hispanic/Latino, 5.1% Asian, 2.3%
Middle Eastern and 3.1%
damn what happened to jamie foxx, I loved him in Django
I think the center for this article could be better illustrated for Channing Tatum. I like Tatum. I think a lot of people like him- he is handsome and charming and he rode on that charm and carisma until he showed everyone he could act. But I don't think a lot of people thought he had more than good looks before Foxcatcher?
I never quite understood the idea that African Americans were underrepresented in Hollywood/TV. If you go by demographics, African Americans make up 12% of the population.
How are they represented in Hollywood? 12%
http://annenberg.usc.edu/pages/~/media/MDSCI/CARDReport FINAL 22216.ashx
Hispanics, Asians need to have their representation increased, but black representation seems to be okay.
The issue isn't the amount of actors in the business, but how these actors are utilized. Only a few movies a year are predominately black, while far more than 60% of films are predominately white.
It's the case the entire thing was a fluke and not something unachievable for the black actors which is what makes this exact comparison shaky. The arguement is so narrow it doesn't get the point across choosing both the both suçcessful minority in hollywood and a fluke incident that occurred to white actor. If you changed one of these points the arguement would work much better
We can get one more blade 🎥 out it him, just one moreWe can rebuild Wesley Snipes.
I don't understand. Reynolds was kinda in a shit period after GL. Dude worked hard to promote and bring Deadpool to the silver screen and succeeded.
No idea when will also Asian actor gonna get their moment too?
The stigma of being a black movie. I just looked up Poetic Justice and The Wood too out of curiosity and damn.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0107840/?ref_=nv_sr_1
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0161100/?ref_=nv_sr_1
IMDB are just movie nerds circlejerking, don't know why people take it seriously.Yea Idris has been working in Hollywood for a very long time. He was a lead actor in The Wire, and was doing things well before then too.
Very happy he's getting a fair variety of opportunities, but even then...what was the last movie he was the lead in? Not a supporting actor like he was in Prometheus, Star Trek and Thor, but the actual man. The lead.
the shit is tragic, isn't it.
edit:
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0103859/
FUCK THIS SHIT.
Eddie Murphy?
Beverly Hills Cop was a breakout hit, and he leveraged that to make a tremendous number of hits over the years. He also made many bombs but studious kept giving him chances.
I'm not making the he worked heard arguement though. I making the arguement that's there's almost no white Ryan Reynolds let alone black Ryan Reynolds. Black actors do get Break out hits, not to the same degree as Deadpool perhaps but even the year before that you had successes like Creed.You can make that argument without saying something along the lines of "Reynolds worked hard" and implying that there aren't minority actors out there working as hard as him.
Maybe there's no black Deadpool moment because the black filmmakers working like Reynolds worked don't get the same opportunity, connections etc. for their work to go anywhere.
I think what this sloppily written piece is trying to say is that mediocre white actors get mediocre work easier than mediocre black actors, thus allowing mediocre white actors to stay in the public consciousness for long enough that they can eventually have a hit.
I think trying to use Deadpool to prove a point but the Deadpool thing doesn't really fit. Maybe they're saying Ryan Reynolds was only able to get Deadpool off the ground cause he was white?
The reason guys like Eddie or Will smith are poor comparisons is because those guys hit it huge out of the gate. Reynolds didn't. He was pushed hard, everything he touched failed, and he continued to get pushed until finally hitting it big within deadpool. You would be hard pressed to find an actor of color that is afforded that many chances before their big break.
I'm not making the he worked heard arguement though. I making the arguement that's there's almost no white Ryan Reynolds let alone black Ryan Reynolds. Black actors do get Break out hits, not to the same degree as Deadpool perhaps but even the year before that you had successes like Creed.
IMDB are just movie nerds circlejerking, don't know why people take it seriously.
The black Ryan Reynolds is Tyrese
He needs a cbm already
Yeah I thought Terrance Howard would be the chosen one, he was on a pretty solid path for awhile until... well...
Idris seems to be the current guy that could get to the next level. Then again, I wouldnt say Ryan Reynolds is anything special, very one-note.
Nate Parker?
In the industry for years, no huge breakout role, then stars and directs in a huge movie where he did a lot of the work to get it funded.
I agree, we need Blade back.
Also Kiss of the Dragon. But I never liked Jet Li as an actor. He's good for action choreography but I don't think he can act. Like, he was great as the bad guy in LW4, or Hero, but that's it.![]()
He even got to k̶i̶s̶s̶ hug Aaliyah. That's the best they're gonna give us.
I never quite understood the idea that African Americans were underrepresented in Hollywood/TV.
I was a film major at a historically white university, so I know. I mentioned a few black movies in class before and the only person who recognized them was the only other black person.
The role calls for him to basically pace around like a caged lion while lawyers play their game around him, and he was damn good at it.
I remember when Ryan Reynolds commented on this when speaking about Michael B Jordan and the stench of FF at the the time. Gladly Creed was a huge success and he's on the better things.
But Michael B. Jordan was not the star of FF. He was just in the movie.
If anything, he is a younger Elba. Increadibly talented, very hard working, critical hit after critical hit on both TV and film who had to work a decade longer than a similarly attractive and talented white guy would have to get a staring vehicle put his way..
and he got to leverage that success into the bad guy of a marvel movie.
If MBJ was white, he would be on the short list for the staring role of every major hollywood project without a lead attached.
The role calls for him to basically pace around like a lion while lawyers play their game around him, and he was damn good at it.
Was never pushed like Reynolds was, who was handed huge role after huge role. And Birth of the Nation made less at the box office than it was purchased for.
Thats an overstatement im here looking at his filmography
Also Kiss of the Dragon. But I never liked Jet Li as an actor. He's good for action choreography but I don't think he can act. Like, he was great as the bad guy in LW4, or Hero, but that's it.
Chow Yun Fat not making it big in Hollywood is a crime against humanity though.
Could you imagine Higher Learning get released nowadays?
I never quite understood the idea that African Americans were underrepresented in Hollywood/TV. If you go by demographics, African Americans make up 12% of the population.
How are they represented in Hollywood? 12%
http://annenberg.usc.edu/pages/~/media/MDSCI/CARDReport FINAL 22216.ashx
Hispanics, Asians need to have their representation increased, but black representation seems to be okay.
.Not trying to derail the thread although i feel it's tangentially related, the question then becomes that why does her prominence back into the limelight come at the expense of two roles that are wrought with criticisms over negative black stereotypes.
I'll never forget the "historic" year where denzel and halle berry became the first two african americans to simultaneous win best actor and best actress (Training day and Monsters ball) but when you look at both of their roles for which they won, denzel being an angry raging conniving black man and Halle being an overly sexualized down on her luck single mother/widower who gets "saved" by a white man, you kind of have to raise some eyebrows.
Yup. What big budget movies did he get to star in? Green Lantern and RIPD? Everything else has been rom coms and smaller projects, I think.Thats an overstatement im here looking at his filmography
The only problem i had with Cuba in that role was that he did not have the two distinct OJ features that I think people associate him especially in the context of the murders, and that's OJs size and deep voice. Cuba seemed like the smallest guy on the show. Maybe someone like Dennis Haysbert pulls off those specific qualities better but it's not like Cuba can help it, considering the material he was given I thought he did an alright job.
My man.![]()
We were never good enough for him
Because it's not a matter of getting the census figures to match up. It's a matter of getting stories about people who aren't white and male in front of audiences that are white and male as a means to help increase understanding and empathy.
Currently even when minority faces are present, they're still only considered accessories to the telling of a predominantly white and male story. That's not to say white/male focused stories can't stir up empathy/sympathy, that they can't evoke real emotions and understanding. But when your largest entertainment export is almost 100% laser focused on telling one demographic's story above all others, you're going to internalize that that demographic is inherently more important than every other.
Which it isn't.
Increasing representation in film is important because that increased representation, over time, helps cause people to internalize (whether they realize it or not) notions of equality, whether that theme is specifically hammered on or not. The more you're used to thinking about people as people, even when they don't look like you, the more those particular walls you have built up over a lifetime come down.
It's why fighting against increased representation, or suggesting representation should hit a certain number and then stop because otherwise there's going to be an "imbalance" rubs people the wrong way, because whether you're realizing it or not, you're inadvertently arguing against the idea of other races/sexes/orientations getting their opportunity to share the stage and tell their stories, which might just be way more universal than you're expecting because of the set defaults in protagonist that you've come to accept.
A movie/story like Moonlight shouldn't be as rare as it is, yunno?
That's why increased representation is a thing. The more audiences get used to the idea of stepping outside of themselves in order to appreciate the prism by which the human experience shines, the more opportunities for those stories to get told, and the better off we are.
Life reflects art reflects life. Only that second reflection stays washed out. It shouldn't be.
But who's the white Chris Tucker?