All I ever wanted was the truth. Remember those words as you read the ones that follow. I never set out to topple my father's kingdom of lies from a sense of misplaced pride. I never wanted to bleed the species to its marrow, reaving half the galaxy clean of human life in this bitter crusade. I never desired any of this, though I know the reasons for which it must be done. But all I ever wanted was the truth.
Yes, my only issue so far is the lack of dwarven beards on the womenfolk. If I recall correctly (which I may very well not be; I could be confusing this with Terry Pratchett), they're just straight-up indistinguishable from male dwarves in most cases. That's a core characteristic of the race, and it's perfectly reasonable to be upset with them changing that.
As for skin colors? Who the hell cares? Why would the other races only have peoples who lived in a temperate zone with no variation from living elsewhere on the planet, especially when there's plenty examples of humans who live in sunnier climes and had to develop melanin to combat it. Elves, especially, are way more cosmopolitan than even humans are. An argument could be made about dwarves given their penchant for living underground, but still... who the hell cares? Why does it matter in the slightest? What's so special about skin color vs. hair or eye color? I'll never understand it.
The disagreement is in how it "contradicts the setting" or how it requires an explanation any more than other details. You're singling out one thing while glossing over the countless others that ALSO make no sense and are not explained, and I'd like to know why skin color SPECIFICALLY is suddenly a deal breaker when all the other things not in line with the source aren't even mentioned.
But that's just a preconception at work. The only reason WHY you think it's jarring is because you come into this expecting one thing, and find another. What you should question, then, isn't why there's difference, but why you have this particular expectation of something to begin with. And, again: truth to the source material can't really be it, at least not without explaining why all the OTHER things that aren't exactly like the original don't matter, but skin color does.
That's the issue here: why people have this special problem with skin color in particular, and why that trait above all others seems to create so much friction with their preconceptions.
Because one is fictional and the other isn't, and one is - in your own words - a HISTORICAL setting and the other one is not.
And by the way: historical fiction can and does take lots of liberties with racial makeups etc. as well, both in the positive and the negative. You think all Romans were Northern-European-looking white dudes? Not even close. But look at what "historical" settings of Rome have usually been depicted as.
You can call it arbitrary, but in one case there is narrative importance attached to certain traits, and in others there isn't. And that MATTERS, and is far from "completely arbitrary", whether it's historical fiction or fantasy fiction or whatever else. Where the narrative demands a particular skin color or racial makeup or whatever, it should be observed; but ONLY IF AND WHEN IT DOES.
No one is asserting that art has some particular job or function here. The point is purely that when it comes to analyzing the structures of narratives, experts will know a lot more about how and why things work as they do than some random person, and when it comes to analyzing things like racial biases or whatever, experts will have a much better view on them than a random person - even though the audience is likely to be almost no experts and almost all random persons. That doesn't mean experts get to say WHAT SOMETHING SHOULD BE, it just means that they're the ones to turn to if you want to know HOW SOMETHING IS PUT TOGETHER.
Which is not what I did, anywhere. So, uh... morally charged by prefacing something with that is... what you just did?
You're free to hold that position, all people are asking for is justification - and so far there hasn't been much that isn't just "but the original says so!" or "that's just how we think it should look like, don't you know that?". There hasn't been one good reason why there is a profound narrative justification for a particular racial makeup within the species Tolkien describes. All we have is cosmetic details that are never made into actual plot points or have any narrative relevance whatsoever anywhere at all.
If your position is "this can't be a diverse setting", PROVE IT.
And as I've pointed out repeatedly, "it's not exactly like it is in the original" is not an argument when it flies in the face of an entire catalog of things that aren't like in the original yet nobody ever has a problem with. Why is skin color special in that respect, and what reason is there OTHER than "it's not like that in the text"?
I'm not saying it's the ONLY thing, I'm saying there's a ton of other things nobody cares about, but they DO care about skin color, and I want to know why. That doesn't mean there can't be other things ALSO bothering you; and I'd totally want to know why for each of those, too, if and when they come up in debate.
While Wakanda is a fictional place, it's firmly rooted in the real world continent of Africa, and designed to reflect the peoples and cultures of sub-Saharan Africa. The racial identity of Wakanda is an important part to the story of the region and how it is seen by the rest of the world.
Meanwhile, the gods of the Norse pantheon (and pretty much all gods in general) aren't human. In the MCU specifically they're aliens from space. So while the characters were created by the peoples of a certain region, gods are mostly just humanoid avatars for natural phenomena used to tell creation and morality tales, and their skin color is merely a product of who named them and not really a key part of what makes them what they are.
A more appropriate comparison would have been to ask if it mattered having a white Danish man play an Egyptian god. On its own I don't think there's anything wrong with that, but the reason that movie got so much backlash was because ALL the main characters were played by white European and Australian actors, which of course brings up the issue of whitewashing.
Sauron took the form of a white elf to manipulate and please the masses, I don't know what you want me to explain. It's literally in the lore that the elves find a fair-skinned individual attractive and beautiful, and Sauron knew this fact.
As for the rest, it's not racist to acknowledge that a black elf does not fit with the pre-established lore of elves who have always been portrayed as white.
And what do you think is important there: that he was white-skinned, or that he was beautiful?
And what do you think was the case, that they found a person beautiful and that it also happened to be a person who had white skin, or that they found them beautiful BECAUSE of the white skin.
And do you think they WOULDN'T have found a person with dark skin beautiful?
As for the skin color part, for some people it's merely emblematic of a perceived lack of respect for the source material- which I personally disagree with at least in a vaccum but I can at least understand the argument.
Some of the other comments levied here and elsewhere however... it's kinda hard to not think of the R word whenever I see one associate black people with crack houses and ugliness.
It is all that is left unsaid upon which tragedies are built -Kreia
The internet: where to every action is opposed an unequal overreaction.
You mean the relatively tiny minority who a.) are fans of Tolkien's more obscure works and b.) are extremely triggered by the appearance of dark skinned people in fantasy world? Yeah, pretty sure when considering the viewership of major streaming shows you're talking about a minuscule fraction of the audience. I guarantee you most of the people who watch it whose major experience with Tolkien are the PJ movies won't be exclaiming "Galadriel in armor?! But in the movie that took place thousands of years later she wore a dress! *gasp*" but more than likely "Galadriel? Cool, I remember her from the movies".
You missed the "in most cases" bit. Which means there are exceptions. Not that it matters in this particular case as there were far too many exceptions in the trilogy, and it's a fault of said trilogy.
I don't know why you seem to think "well they fucked up then, so it's okay to fuck up now!!!" as a brilliant response.
And yet, Anne Boleyn was a Queen of very white England in the 16th Century and AMC cast a black woman to play her and expected (and received) praise for it, despite it not being appropriate at all. And that's a historical figure, not some comic book character.
Also, there are white Africans you know. There are multiracial societies in Africa, in fact. So why is it suddenly a stretch for an African prince to be white when there are white people all over Africa?
Considering how synonymous the art design of his team in those movies has become to the world of Tolkien in people's minds, the fact that they "fucked up" this way and it had absolutely no bearing on the quality (or lack thereof) of that trilogy should be a hint...
It's always funny to me that people go to the ONE black character they can think of in a sea of white superheroes in a flaccid attempt to point outa double standard.
If you want to tell/watch a story about a white monarch doing white monarch things, there are probably hundreds of examples in film/television for you to choose from. Equating that with a character specifically created to be a black superhero because that was something sorely lacking up to that point...well...good luck with that.
Nevermind that in the context of the MCU and the story so far, if there was a point where Bucky found himself in the suit to help out an ailing Wakanda (in return for everything they'd done for him), it would work just fine.
AND nevermind that in the context of this show, the black guy that the racists have flipped their shit over is exactly what anti-woke dipshits are always demanding: a new character created specifically for the series, and not simply a race-swap of a pre-existing one.
Last edited by s_bushido; 2022-08-06 at 06:35 PM.
This isn't about bias in the abstract and doesn't make sense, because this literally isnt 1920 and there are plenty of films and series with diversity in them. So for all these shows to claim that they need to change things for this reason is actually dishonest. Case in point, how many shows at SDCC 2022 were talking about 'breaking ground' in terms of diversity? How is it possible for all of them to be breaking the same ground when it literally was also being done on other shows and movies from earlier this year, the year before that and on back going back many years now? At some point, they should just stop pretending they are breaking new ground when they aren't. Most people could care less about that dubious achievement.
But if you are deviating so far from the source material, especially written source material, that you need to do a lot of writing to justify the changes, then something is wrong. At that point you aren't really adapting the story, as opposed to making something new that is similar to an existing story. Making a live action transformers is not the same as claiming to be "adapting" Tolkien. One is simply re-imagining an existing franchise in a new medium, the other is literally taking what exists on the written page and putting it into live action. The need for fidelity is going to be judged differently between the two.
Staying relevant to the source material is all about the characters, their world and the actions taking place in it as defined in the source. That is the only definition of a story and specifically if said story is popular already, then the adaption is trying to piggyback off of that. But the catch is that changing something that is already popular, because of the original source material, risks potentially far less popularity because of those changes. And that applies to everything. One of the reasons Peter Jackson stayed close to the source is because he felt that was the only way to honor Tolkien and likely to not wind up with something corny, derivative or looking like a parody. And this is the problem specifically with things involving high fantasy or fantasy in general, they often tend to come off as corny or derivative in live action, especially due to writing and characters, but also due to effects. So there are a lot of things that can go wrong with such a live action adaptation. The difference is that in the past corporations weren't trying to guilt trip people into going to see these films and nobody was grandstanding about diversity. Which often today, is done almost all the time, especially with European fantasy as if somehow black people need to see themselves in fantasy based on European history or mythology? Like why? By that logic nobody can watch an Asian martial arts story because they aren't Asian or nobody not American can watch an American movie or television show because they aren't American. It is absurd reductionist logic.
This is the problem with Hollywood thinking where they literally believe that "adapting" something gives them license to re-imagine everything about it. The problem becomes what is the definition of an adaptation and as I mentioned above with Transformers vs Tolkien, there is no one yard stick as "adaptation" means different things in different contexts. Right now the biggest issue with this specific show is they are trying to claim that they are literally writing what Tolkien never wrote, while going against what he did write. This is not abstract or theoretical, it is about them trying to market the show based on a false premise, which implies that they are staying true to Tolkien when they are not. This is what is getting a lot of the outrage from many people specifically for this show.
Skin color, textures and other features are relevant to defining the characteristics of peoples and creatures in a fantasy world. It is fantasy and you need to define the characteristics of the world in order to have characters defined in it that operate in a way that is realistic for that world. And again, this is why Tolkien is so respected because he took the time to define those things as part of a mythology. It is a fantasy world modeled on specific real world myths and legends. And contrary to your point, mythology and folklore have never been "diverse" in the sense of including everybody in them. Most mythology and folklore is specific to the culture and people that created it and not about including anybody and everybody. Just like in real life almost no army has ever been made up of 50% female warriors, but sure that could happen in fantasy, but that is not part of Tolkien's fantasy story is the point.
And again, the studio themselves are the ones making skin color part of the marketing for the show. The actors have said it in interviews and the producers have talked about it as well. So it isn't just that the people are noticing and making an issue of it. Again, it is fallacious reasoning because Tolkien has fans of the source material all over the world and I don't recall any non Europeans demanding "representation" in his work. If they just changed those things and didn't say anything about it to call it out as "ground breaking", that would be one thing, but not only are they calling it out, the entire story they are telling is built around it. So it is impossible in this case to separate the changes for "diversity" from the other changes that go against the lore. They all go together.
Last edited by InfiniteCharger; 2022-08-06 at 06:46 PM.
The insinuation that anyone who disagrees with you is somehow singling out skin colour is disingenuous. Just because we are currently talking about this particular thing doesn't mean it's the only issue I have with the show. There are plenty of concerns people have with this show and skin colour isn't even close to being the most prominent.
I have the expectation for Tolkien's universe to look like Tolkien's universe because that's the way Tolkien describes it?
That's not an argument. That's just a truism. Why is adherence to known facts important in a historical setting but not in a fantasy setting?
If we stick with the example of a movie set in feudal Japan (pre contact with the Portuguese) would it matter then? In that case there would be "no narrative importance attached" to the racial makeup because there were no real racial antagonisms as we know them that could make it relevant. Do you think it would then be unreasonable for people to think it's jarring to have white/black Samurai fighting each other in feudal Japan without any given explanation?
This is different from what you said earlier. You said that the average person is an idiot who doesn't understand why we should change things and that only academic elites have a solid enough grasp on these topics to speak with any authority on the matter. But again, I don't think we'll find any sort of agreement in regards to this.
Everyone can read what you said. Wanting an adaptation to be true to its source material = repeating patterns of systematic exclusion which is then further qualified with the strawman position of "I don't want to see black people in my fantasy because I don't like that". The implication is very obvious.
Just because you don't care about the justification does not mean it's not a valid concern. You can repeat ad absurdum that it doesn't affect the narrative. It doesn't need to in order to be perceived as jarring. You could gender swap most characters without "affecting the narrative". That doesn't mean it wouldn't be a jarring deviation from the source material.
Yeah. Nobody ever has any problem with anything except skin colour. Why are you so desperately trying to frame this as an issue of hipocrisy?
What do you want me to say? That people are annoyed by the "woke pandering" of this show that deliberately tries to make its diversity a selling point? That this particular thing receives special attention because racists exist? That you can only view this through the lense of culture war issues? Wow, what a shocking concept.
Last edited by Nerovar; 2022-08-06 at 06:53 PM.
The absolute state of Warcraft lore in 2021:
Kyrians: We need to keep chucking people into the Maw because it's our job.
Also Kyrians: Why is the Maw growing stronger despite all our efforts?
No. I mean the people who read the books and were happy with them as they were. No different than people who watched Akira and were happy with it being set in Japan. The idea that people "needed" to see themselves in Tolkien is the issue here as I don't know anybody who has been demanding this except these producers and leftist academics. So it is circular argument because basically they claim to be making the change because people are racist and against the change. So when people say something about it, that justifies their changes, which is purely political and has absolutely nothing to do with Tolkien. He wasn't writing his story to be an allegory for racial relations in 19th or 20th century America or Europe.
Latest trailer it's weird. It's clearly had a lot of money put into it. But it does look very fake and cheap. If they had everyone except galadriel roll around in the mud before shooting it might not be so bad. Its like a rich person's house where everything is clean and nothing looks lived in
yay woke garbage, taking a shit on european heritage and history LotR was based/inspired by. middle-earth being ethnically new york. lmao. can't wait to have "girls get it done" forced moment and some racism allegory, maybe Gorg Floydoth, a black elf killed by h*mans.
I hate that activists are nowadays in movie/tv industry, ruining stuff for normal people with their agendas.
Last edited by Radeghost; 2022-08-06 at 08:40 PM.