It's more culture than race tbh, though there's a thin line between the two with our multicultural society.
Having black actors portray characters that are very much rooted in northern European mythology... it'll piss people off, it's not 'their' culture.
Having white actors portray characters from African mythology would provoke the same response. I'm pretty sure everyone remembers the whole Gods of Egypt shitshow.
Agree it's extremely racist to feel the need to add token characters to settings created as analogous to medieval Europe specifically the UK area rather than adapting stories that would naturally have largely minorities cast and very few if any white people.
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They are literally wrong though. For Hispanics yes there is a major dearth of opportunities. For black actors the awards and opportunities are actually higher than the population percentage would indicate in the current time period. I can name multiple black actors who are star level basically zero hispanic ones and outside kung-fu roles nearly zero Asian ones. There is absolutely racial profiling but there isn't a lack of roles for black Americans like there are for other minority groups
Infracted.
Last edited by eschatological; 2022-02-17 at 06:30 AM.
I might be strawmanning this, but it's how I see these discussions:
A: We're including other races in the story because historically there's been a lack of diversity in movies and shows.
B: Alright, then work them into the story, introduce nations and factions whose background explains their appearance.
A: No, no, we are trying to show how people of all races are mixed in society, to represent the real world. <- Goalpost moved.
B: Alright, then you should feature actors from the middle and far east, south America, northern Europe...
A: No, no, we want to represent modern American society, and focus on American minorities. <- Goalpost moved again.
B: Alright, then you should feature native-americans, latinos...
And at that point I don't think I've ever seen a decent response. "They're too much of a minority" isn't a great argument when you're the one pushing for minorities to be represented in the first place.
The truth is simpler, certain minorities are trendy right now, and producers want to cash in to that.
That isn't necessarily wrong. It's greedy, creatively bankrupt, and slightly racist. But not ill-intended. Although it should be obvious to anyone when a movie or a show is sincere about their representation, and when they're just virtue signaling for money, and anyone not getting a paycheck shouldn't be parroting their excuses as if they believed them.
Infracted.
Last edited by eschatological; 2022-02-17 at 06:31 AM.
Your argument is what, that they grabbed people off the streets? That they only got inspired to include these minorities after visiting the filming location?
It's an american company with american actors playing around with american politics to, hopefully, earn more money.
But Tolkien himself said that Galadriel was proud, brash and ambitious. She was very tall and strong, as in athletic. He mother called her "Nerwen", which means "Man-maiden". She was one of the leaders of the Noldor Rebellion. As a member of the White Council, she participated in the attack on Dol Guldur. And she probably used a sword or a bow in that attack. She wouldn't use magic that much. It's Middle-earth, not Dungeons & Dragons. Even Gandalf used a sword when he was fighting. He wasn't throwing fireballs around.
"But elven women were healers! Men were the warriors!" Right, but Elrond, while being a great warrior, was also a great healer. In fact, that's how we see him in LotR. Was he acting womanly?
Also, being brash and hot-headed is not antithetic with being wise or insightful.
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"Je vous répondrai par la bouche de mes canons!"
The trailer was terrible. Like truly horrible. It was the most generic and bland piece of Fantasy I saw in the last years. It really rivals Wheel of Time or those cheap Netflix Fantasy shows.
What the f* happened? Like honestly. I am so happy the reception is devastatingly negative. It's not even about the political bullsh*t they try to implement (there are no black Elves or Dwarves, period), it just looks cheap. The diversity casting just makes it worse, not bad in general.
Infracted.
Last edited by eschatological; 2022-02-17 at 06:33 AM.
MAGA - Make Alliance Great Again
Did it really look so bad? I mean I've got my criticisms of the casting, but I thought in terms of the overall look it was good. That opening shot could have been straight out of the Jackson films. I don't know what people were expecting. What could they have done to satisfy people who thought it looked generic?
Common misconception produced by movies. In books he most definately used magic, often and in nearly every combat encounter. Hell. During their walk towards Caradhras when the wolves and the warg attacked them he set entire ring of trees ablaze to guard them and flamed up Legolas's arrows midflight. He wasn't so much the sword-slashing action hero like in the movies even if he carried and used it.
Last edited by Wilian; 2022-02-16 at 04:47 PM.
Modern gaming apologist: I once tasted diarrhea so shit is fine.
"People who alter or destroy works of art and our cultural heritage for profit or as an excercise of power, are barbarians" - George Lucas 1988
The thing is that as is usual with these modern productions, the sweeping, scene setting shots of landscapes, cities etc. do look good. Really good even. The problem arise when we get into more minute details and events. As is usual, armours and clothes tend to be overdesigned with idea that more clutter is always better, closer sets appear sterile and almoust feel like that if camera shifts even little bit we can see the studio hall peeking from the corner or it's so CGI'd up it cannot be missed. This while general makeup/styling is bland (not bland as is colourless or necessarily poorly made but the sort that doesn't convey a look at real people. Rather, they look like cosplayers trying to appear like the people they actually are).
This has been my issue with many of these new modern fantasy series.
Modern gaming apologist: I once tasted diarrhea so shit is fine.
"People who alter or destroy works of art and our cultural heritage for profit or as an excercise of power, are barbarians" - George Lucas 1988
"Generic" is the go-to word parroted by people, especially fans of a franchise, who just want to hate on something when they cannot say why. It means nothing, and people probably use it without even knowing what it means. Some people hate "The Rings of Power" because of brown elves and clean-shaven dwarf princesses, so the trailer must be bad. Since they find nothing objectively bad about it, they resort to "it looks like any other fantasy show or movie (Wheel of Time, Narnia, etc)". It's "generic". Well, of course, it is a fantasy show, they would share some tropes. It's like when, in new Star Trek shows, they introduce a new ship or a new race. Well, some people hate Kurtzman's guts, so of course the new ship must be bad, so they say it's "generic." It's not that there's anything wrong about it, it's just that it looks like a ship from any other Sci-Fi show, it does not scream "Star Trek", so it's bad and Kurtzman "hates the fans", etc. Well of course it does not scream Star Trek, it's new! The first Borg ship, when it was introduced, did not scream Star Trek at all. And it was a cube, can you have more "generic" than that? Guess fans were a bit more open-minded back then...
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He was still using a sword to attack enemies, and Legolas' arrows still killed those wargs, even if Gandalf set them on fire. I never said magic was absent, just that it was more subtle than in D&D or other fantasy settings. Galadriel would be the same. She would wear some armor and carry a weapon in battle. Or at least there is nothing in the legendarium that prevents it.
"Je vous répondrai par la bouche de mes canons!"
My point was that it wasn't subtle and happened constantly. Going by the books he barely used his sword in comparison. It's a movie thing. And it was not really subtle either. Skies were filled with lightning seen tens to hundred miles away, setting entire circles of trees on fire. Casting light so bright it consumed entire flight of Nazguls.
There were more subtle moments of magic usage as well yes, just as there is in DnD but there were enough of these blazing moments as well and typically in almoust every battle scene he is involved.
Modern gaming apologist: I once tasted diarrhea so shit is fine.
"People who alter or destroy works of art and our cultural heritage for profit or as an excercise of power, are barbarians" - George Lucas 1988
This is a good post. Unfortunately, many people these days feel the reflexive need to jump to the defense of these companies merely because they get criticized by the wrong crowd. This makes these sorts of conversations incredibly tiring.
I guess the shots just have that weird marvel CGI "gloss" all over them. The Jackson movies had this gritty, realistic feeling of a lived-in world which was achieved by the clever combination of CGI and practical effects like models for the cities. They also made great use of the new color grading technologies that were becoming available at that time to give every scene a different mood and create more vibrant images that in some cases look more real than the real world. The Jackson movies also seem to have much better camera work that gives off a very serene feeling and places an immense sense of gravity on the objects and characters in the right moments.
Now, I know that they did some costly practical effects for that teaser scene in the water but when it comes to the other shots I couldn't really tell if they incorporated any. It's like with the Star Wars prequels which also made use of a lot of practical effects but ultimately got drowned out by the overbearing use of CGI.
Last edited by Nerovar; 2022-02-16 at 05:48 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?