Last edited by s_bushido; 2022-08-05 at 07:00 PM.
Was he portrayed at his full height, then?
I suppose you could make the case that the LoTR movies are sizeist in the sense that they didn't cast actual dwarfish people to play the dwarfs. Since minority parts are only allowed to be played by actors belonging to those minorities, whether it be by race, gender, sexuality, gender expression, religion, disability, etc ... Straight cis white men are the only people on the planet incapable of acting out a role that embodies anything other than their inherent characteristics, and they are thusly not allowed to.
If someone pitched a new version of Roots with Jason Alexander as Kunta Kinte and Idris Elba as a slavedriver, and mixed up both the slaves and slaveowners with an entire variety of races portraying any character all higgledy-piggledy then people would likely fume only about the fact that Alexander and the other white people playing slaves had been cast in those parts. Plus, the show would absolutely suck because no one would buy these actors as those characters. I'm sure there would still be defenders of how brave it was to cast Elba in that part.
Make a Lord of the Rings movie with a neon-pink/green/yellow dragon that speaks like Paul Lynde, do you think it would be a success? Would great writing save it? Or would people rebel against it because we have preconceived ideas of what a LoTR dragon looks and sounds like, just like we have preconceived ideas of what LoTR elves and dwarves look and sound like because we've been reading these books for decades.Originally Posted by Biomega
That's quite a lot of splitting hairs with the ultimate point to it being 'it doesn't really fucking matter'.
Like, you're trying to illustrate the existence of rules that don't really exist for the sake of defending a point that really doesn't matter. At the end of the day either you're okay with the choices or you aren't, because there's never going to be some universal rule that defines whether it is 'morally acceptable' for any living Human to portray a fictional non-Human race.
Last edited by Triceron; 2022-08-05 at 07:10 PM.
You must be aware that it only hurts what ever point your trying to make when you compare a fantasy setting where race doesn’t matter at all to movies about real time periods and real race based processes.
I mean do you people try and make your selfs look like fools with stuff like this or do you really lack self awareness on such a level?
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.
Okay, so clearly some changes make sense and others don't. With you so far.
Now explain why SKIN COLOR is one of those problematic ones, and not one of the ones you wouldn't have a problem with.
Because clearly "well you wouldn't want everyone to be be NEON-GREEN either" is not a good argument, since that doesn't tie into anything and is an arbitrary exaggeration that doesn't explain why, say, some random character being blond instead of brunette WOULDN'T bother you, even though you could leverage the same exaggeration against that.
Why single out skin color?
In principle... yeah, probably. It'd have to be pretty fucking great, and I have no idea how it would work in detail, but I wouldn't categorically exclude a neon-punk version of LotR from ever working period.
But again: you're only explaining that SOME aspects would probably be more problematic than others, which I'm sure no one in their right mind would disagree with.
You're NOT explaining why SKIN COLOR is such a problematic aspect.
So what you're saying is:
1. YOU have preconceived notions about what LotR elves and dwarves look like (despite the rather sparse physical descriptions by Tolkien, who never even mentioned elves having pointed ears, for example)
2. You think that those preconceived notions are a good thing, and shouldn't ever be challenged or changed; despite the fact that numerous adaptations have already changed SOME things that you probably aren't complaining about
I'd like to hear more about why either of those are in fact the case and/or relevant
This isn't really about the "importance" of these rules. It's about which ones are deliberately suspended by the narrative and which ones are not. Different ethnic groups that correspond to geographical locales exist in middle earth analogous to our own world. Different peoples and their appearance and history are often described by the author. Racist notions exist within the setting even if only sparsely explored (description of the men of Far Harad comes to mind). The existence of Elves and Dwarves is expained and explored as part of the narration. Nothing similar exists that would elucidate why the peoples of middle earth would all look like the modern day United States.
I find this whole line of argumentation kind of tiresome. I wonder what kind of inclusion to make Middle Earth "reflect what the world actually looks like" would present a sort of red line for people like you (assuming there even is one). Can we assume wheelchair bound characters would be feasible since the text isn't an exploration of ableism?
Last edited by Nerovar; 2022-08-05 at 08:09 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?
Why are we even casting humans for fictional races in the first place? Surely they'd be better as full CGI?
It wouldn't have been much of a stretch to turn Radaghast into this based off of Peter Jackson's portrayal, and it wouldn't have been any great travesty to have done so.Can we assume wheelchair bound characters would be feasible since the text isn't an exploration of ableism?
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Plays / drama presentations/ Broadway must be excruciating for you guys with such limited imaginations.
please post the quote where i say i was ok with it, because unless i need to see an optician, i can't find that in anything i said, the comparison i made was to highlight the difference between the two projects, and the fact you still can't see that point speaks volumes frankly, what PJ did with legolas was artistic license, what Amazon and these clowns called writers/showrunners are doing is rewriting the entire basis of middle earth and how things function, that was the difference i was trying to point out, and yet here you are once again trying to put words in my mouth that never existed, twisting what's written to make yourself look clever when it does the opposite really, and honestly i'm bored of it, you're not the only one that does it but it's sad that that's what you fall back to as your main form of arguement, misquoting and misspeaking, almost as if you are natural born politician.
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right, lets take this to an extreme, are you familiar with the fairy tale of hansel and gretel by hans christian andersen?
based on his writing the characters of hansel and gretel are portrayed as being your children, one male, one female, both of them are white, both of them are stereotypical of the region of where the author was from (denmark), meaning that they would have been fairly pale and likely blonde haired with blue or brown eyes.
200 years later, lets take this fairy tale and 'have it depict what our modern day looks like' instead of stereotypically scandinavian children, they have been race swapped into african american children, because we all know that black people outside of the USA wouldn't work, and instead of finding a witches cabin made of sweets, they find a crack house and become mules for the druglord (again taking the example to an extreme), how do you think people would react to this change? do you think people would be justified in their anger at having the original characters race swapped?, should we just say 'well it's modern times and people need to get with the times and stop complaining' (like many people have basically said in this thread), should we dismiss the complaints as people being 'racist' because they don't want these new iterations of characters?, i'm genuinely curious why this is such a hard concept for people to get their head around and yet are the ones screeching the loudest about racism and 'why can't *insert POC/minority group here* be "X" character?' despite all written accounts telling us why, i'm genuinely perplexed by the utter moronic arguements being made that defend this garbage project.
This is probably the worst example yet. Hansel and Gretel has already been adapted 500 times, including into anime and World of Warcraft, and their ethnicity doesn't change the fact that you can recognize the story in all of them. And no, there probably wouldn't be anger about their ethnicity, just the blatant fucking racism for what you would consider a "black version" of the story. Like seriously, could you people just fuck off with this shit?
I can actually kinda buy there being black skinned dwarves. Maybe some clans or families have worked exclusively coal mines and maybe throughout the centuries, the coal dust have seeped into their skin and they've become more black as time goes on.
I dunno.
Just don't reply to me. Please. If you can help it.
thank you for showing everyone you completely missed the point, and by extension failed to understand the point and are instead getting your panties in a bunch over the wrong thing, like so many have done already while trying to argue they in the right, it just goes to show how poor the reading and comprehension skills are in this thread by so many people if this is the kind of response provided.
So point out where Tolkien talked about the skin colors of dwarves or elves, and how they're different because of where they're located.
I'm happy to be shown references.
There's SOME references to different HUMANS, although with them, too, it's very hard to tell where/if Tolkien is talking about skin color and not something else. Just like him describing elves as "fair" does not have to refer to their complexion, as it can (and most likely does) simply mean "beautiful to behold" rather than "light-skinned". And even where he IS talking about skin color, one group being primarily one skin color would not automatically mean all OTHER groups of humans are ALSO just one skin color.
Skin color wasn't what Tolkien was interested in, it's as simple as that. His narrative revolves around different forms of categorization, and those are preserved even if you have a black dwarf or an Asian-looking elf.
You and me both. Mostly because 90% of it isn't an argument, it's just "I don't want black people in my fantasy, because they don't belong in there for... uh... reasons that aren't racist I promise I swear I really do".
That's a complete misrepresentation of the argument. It's not about a fictional setting reflecting "what the world actually looks like". It's about removing selection criteria for which there is no good, relevant narrative or artistic justification. What you're suggesting is getting that process entirely backwards.
This can and does happen in fiction ALL THE TIME. In fact your example is a pretty good one, as "updated" reinterpretations of classic folk/faerie tales are ubiquitous across all kinds of genres. That's a GOOD thing, and it's done in all sorts of contexts and in all kinds of literary spaces. Some of those stories are great, some are shit; but that's because for ALL stories some are great and some are shit. Nothing new there.
What YOU would need to explain here is how Hänsel and Gretel being white matters to the story. In fact, stories like that are often dissected into constituent parts in academic scholarship, which are largely context-agnostic - i.e. for the vast majority of them the principles at the root of the narrative do not care one bit about whether it's two white kids or whether it's a boy and a girl or whatever, and the story would work just the same - at a fundamental level - if it was two black girls or two Asian boys.
You've effectively demonstrated precisely WHY race does NOT matter for a majority of stories, and is relevant only to those narratives that specifically and profoundly engage with those characteristics themselves. So thanks, I guess!
This is an awful lot of text just to project, while also saying very little.
IIRC, the text of your post said people gave it a pass as nothing more than a bit of artistic license, it was disregarded. I.E. it isn't an issue in this case, for whatever reason. I didn't need to twist any words in your post.
Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters was amazing, btw.
Last edited by UnifiedDivide; 2022-08-05 at 09:30 PM.
once again proving you lack the education needed to understand what was being said, and lack the critical reading and comprehension skills necessary to understand the point, if you can't understand something, the correct response is to ask for clarity and help with that lack of understanding, instead all you have done is berate me for no reason, but carry on, i'm sure it's making you look great.
interesting edit being made to your original posting of this, that aside, you still missed the entire point of the comparison, and you are showing and have shown a clear lack of mental acuity to be able to compartmentalise things, you're very clearly unable to detach concepts and must always label things and put them into predetermined boxes, you are showing you clearly lack the fundamental ability to disassociate things, i suggest trying again when you have learned this skill.
as to hansel and gretel: witch hunters, i too enjoyed it, but i'm not sure what that has to do with the comment i made and extreme stereotype comparison i made to highlight my point, in that particular movie all characters were white actors playing the roles assigned to them, the only change was that instead of being taken in by the witch and eaten, the kids escaped, became killers of the supernatural and turned the concept around, nothing of the actual characters themselves was fundamentally changed, unlike with this clownshow where everything so far is very bad fan fiction writing, terrible casting based on fundamentally flawed reasoning, and yet here we are seeing people defend this dross because it's 'brave' 'empowering' 'activist supporting' bullshit.
Tolkien was very positively writing a Northern European mythology, drawing on assorted myths and legends from North-West Europe. Obviously the characters (should) reflect that. Trying to force "the message" instead of focusing on the actual story and lore is very distburing. We have an obligation to the author and his amazing work to present his world the way he created it and not forcing politics and modern values upon it.