Okay, let me look up what on Earth you guys are talking about.The point of Hamilton was anything other than being Lin-Manuel Miranda's vanity project, based on 800 pages of poorly-written whitewash and sloppy neoliberal blowjob to America's worst founding father, that happened to get a better reception than it deserved because bougie shitlibs needed something to wank off to during The Bad Orange Man Times?
.........Hamilton: An American Musical is a sung-and-rapped-through musical by Lin-Manuel Miranda. It took over seven years to compose. It tells the story of American Founding Father Alexander Hamilton. Miranda said that he was inspired to write the musical after reading the 2004 biography Alexander Hamilton by Ron Chernow. Miranda says Hamilton was originally a hip hop album in his head. The show draws heavily from hip hop, as well as R&B, pop, soul, and traditional-style show tunes. It casts non-white actors as the Founding Fathers of the United States and other historical figures.[1][2][3] Miranda described Hamilton as about "America then, as told by America now."[4]
Modern art offends me morally, in the sense that millions of taxpayer dollars are often spent of that garbage. I read an interesting article comparing modern art and NFTs a little while ago.Inoffensive in the sense that it’s not obviously or at face value about or representative of an offensive or confronting subject, sure.
Offensive in that lay people - like me - look at it and when compared with the great art we have managed to preserve from periods long past, find it wanting.
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This for example is the Vault. A piece of public abstract art first erected in Melbourne in 1978. It’s sculptor and a fair amount of other artists love it. However when it was put up, it was largely hated by the public at large. And when I look at it all I see is someone utterly fucking up erecting a garage.
Modern art offends people aesthetically, not morally. And I largely agree; that thing was a waste of perfectly good sheet metal.
Still a million times better than the rapping dog. I saw Hamilton once, and it's surprisingly good and entertaining. I never felt any cringed. Everyone actually cared about the end product. Hamilton became a success and a big hit for audiences.Okay, let me look up what on Earth you guys are talking about.
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........ Man that sounds cringe as hell. Like the rapping dog cringe.
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If you're gonna argue that comic book/ fantasy/ Sci fi etc haven't generally gone through a consciously "darker", grittier tone during recent years, because a clear outlier exists, that's a bit of a non-starter.I mean you're probably right with that being a trend in comic book films, but especially Marvel. Just like that other 2014 MCU release...
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OK, but whether or not you or I actually like the product in question isn't really relevant to my question. I don't like it either, but the question stands.The point of Hamilton was anything other than being Lin-Manuel Miranda's vanity project, based on 800 pages of poorly-written whitewash and sloppy neoliberal blowjob to America's worst founding father, that happened to get a better reception than it deserved because bougie shitlibs needed something to wank off to during The Bad Orange Man Times?
Ah yes, the solid argument of "weaponisation is v badit's called making a solid argument. You and Silvanus might want to try it some time.
Pigeons looking like they're about to drop the hottest hip hop banger of the year
Not sure how many you're going to find outside the Iberian peninsula in that period.We want more POC to be in roles that are not traditionally "POC Roles". We want POC people to play as nobles in Medieval Europe-like places
It's silly, and I moved on with my life, as Henry VIII's been done to death.Tell me this though, how do you feel with the casting a POC playing a real life historical figure who is in reality white?
One can easily find other examples.All I can say is, thank god Black Panther exists. Otherwise if somebody said "but what if we took a movie where most of the cast was black with a token white guy and made them white with a token black guy, people would call that racist!", they wouldn't be able to use a Marvel example.
You've lumped at least four different IPs, one of which isn't high fantasy together, so it's silly to compare them.Anyway, the second half of my post that got ate because apple wanted to be "intuitive":
While color based casting can *potentially* make sense in the case of certain specific period dramas, anywhere else it's just bone stupid. Castlevania figured it out because they remembered that Europe had ports and trade. Can't tell me they both had a road that went from France to Jerusalem and also tell me that nobody ever came back the other way, that'd be asinine.
Lord of the Rings? Yeah, add some color to that shit. It ain't very meritocratic if you can only pick white people in all the non-prosthetic roles. It's not Earth. A genie lamp makes it all the way to Not-Poland in the Witcher but nobody with melanin did? C'mon now. Hell, Delicious in Dungeon/Dungeon Meshi mixes up some skin tones largely because why the hell not? Why wouldn't elves come in a variety of skin tones?
Da fuq?Black Adam is happening and he's basically if Superman was Black. So that's kind of already happening.
Go home. You're drunk.There are some things like that where race is interchangable. But in those instances you must have actors that can portray the part accurately, or convincingly whatever. Like Tessa Thompson in the past couple of Thor movies has been fucking garbage. She can't act for shit and is only in the film as a diversity hire because I find it hard to believe she nailed the audition.
Well, guess I'm a racist then?This is all very simple, if everyone's equal then having a bunch of one type of race is the same as having more types, since it's all the same anyways. People of different races should be able to empathize with the humanity of that one group and not need their own little niche catered to in order to be able to watch something.
Kung fu flicks should be all chinese people (with maybe that one guy that uses a different martial art who is usually the villain being something else, and only sparsely), the boondocks is mainly a black show so it's black chars, tolkeinesque fantasy is all nordic and other european people, thousand and one nights is all arabic folk, anime is all japanese people unless otherwise stated in the lore (irrespective of eye or hair color, those go towards depicting personality traits) so on and so forth. All are worthwhile stories, all are worth catering to. If you want something to have more support, just watch it and buy merch of it more, don't try to somehow usurp other things into being more like it, those things are fine being themselves.
The only racist is the one who finds something wrong with the above.
When the Force Awakens teaser trailer was released, there was an outcry on the Internet (not too major, but reported on) about Finn being a stormtrooper. Looking at your post, there's a lot to correct.I don't remember people crying too much about Finn prior to the film's release. But I might have missed it maybe?
Technically I do think it goes against the lore of the universe because aren't the Stormtroopers supposed to be clones of the emperor or some shit. Thus Finn being a black guy goes against the lore previously established. The same goes for Captain Fantasma as there can be no female troopers due to the fact that they are clones. The Disney trilogy really didn't give a fuck about the cannon from what I've heard which probably enrages fanboys more than a pallet swap on a person.
You don't fuck with cannon, that's like nerd-dom rule 101.
So outcry about Finn could have been racist, but it probably doesn't originate from a racist place. Corilation not equaling causation and all that.
No. Stormtroopers were never and have never been clones in any set of canon.
Better? No. Worse? Arguably. Would it have been worse if the main four retained everything but were all pale? Not really. You wouldn't have to change a word of dialogue.Would this movie have been better if they were all white and straight, with more men? Like, it's an animated movie, they couldn't just go with whoever was cast. The diversity had to be planned from the get-go.
I disagree. It's an asinine way of looking at things, to say "X is here, therefore, it's "forced diversity.""Diversity Points," "Diversity Checkboxes," whatever you want to call it are when a media decides to throw in diversity for the sheer sake of having it and nothing else. It was really blatant that's what they were doing when Falcon took up the mantle of Captain America in the comics and giving it to Sam in the MCU was a bad idea just based on the stigma left behind from that train wreck, but the story really didn't service the idea to begin with. Maybe Sam becoming Captain America wasn't motivated by diversity, but it gives every possible indication of it. They may have salvaged it since but they really had better options.
Um...kinda?I mean the original Buzz Lightyear show had a blue alien girl, a big red alien guy and a yellow headed robot...... So does that mean new Lightyear is actually less diverse??
You can, but if you're adapting a work, and make major changes to the work, don't be surprised when eyebrows start to be raised.I mean, its fiction. You can do whatever you want
You mean the Galactic Alliance that the planet is only suddenly part of after having been out of contact and stranded for over 60 years?But it would be nice to see the full breadth of the Galactic Alliance in future movies.
I've set money aside to get it on DVD, so hopefully.Is anyone actually going to watch this show?
First, the books aren't "100% white." I have no idea what the percentage is, and since identity politics suck I have no desire to, but you have two entire continents' worth of non-white people, plus Dorne in Westeros, so if you're obsessed with skin colour, good news for you.I have zero interest in these shows, but I just saw the trailers for House of the Dragon and Rings of Power, then I checked their IMDb pages to make sure. It's just more of the same, but the new Legolas is black now, that's about it. Nearly everyone else is white. Oh no, Klingonarnia isn't 100% white like the books. It's all fantasy nonsense. The Fast and Furious movies are more "woke" than this.
I can't compare Berserk to anything, but if you're talking about stuff like Streets of Rage and Street Fighter, it's another false equivalence. Those two games take place in the 20th/21st centuries, with the former taking place entirely in the US (which is ethnically diverse), and the latter taking place all over the world and having easy travel. In contrast, a fantasy story can operate under whatever rules it wants to, but if your starting inspiration is Medieval Europe, then your real-world starting point is a setting where travel is difficult, and where "diversity" is a lot more limited (this would likewise apply to any setting inspired by any point in history from any location - Mother Lands is entirely West African derived, Cyote and Crow entirely Amerindian derived, Poppy War entirely Chinese derived, etc.)As much as I despise the franchise, F&F have been multicultural since day 1. Hell, games like Streets of Rage, Street Fighter, and a majority of fighting games or brawlers care more about diversity, than either Medieval fantasy stories could. Berserk (at least in the beginning) is more diverse than GoT or LoR.
You know one of the joys I find in life is hearing someone call Black Panther woke, and then another person calling it conservative. It truly is such an interesting view of things.You can't identify one in a hundred people who saw Black Panther and noticed the US policy critique, in a woke movie
I dunno Brawlman. Like, I have no moral objection to that idea, it's just that when I read the description all it does is make me think of all the rapping in 90's cartoons that people look back on and literally cringe at. But I haven't seen it, and you know I'm not much of a rap aficionado anyway so whatever. If you like it and it's good then good on you and the musical but I don't think it's my thing.Still a million times better than the rapping dog. I saw Hamilton once, and it's surprisingly good and entertaining. I never felt any cringed. Everyone actually cared about the end product. Hamilton became a success and a big hit for audiences.
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How Lin-Manuel Miranda's non-stop work ethic from a young age made 'Hamilton' one of the most successful musicals of all time
Miranda's blend of theater and hip-hop has transformed musical theater. Here's how he got his start, and what he's got lined up for the future.www.businessinsider.com
Don't knock it, till you try it. Remember that there are so many different genres and levels of rap and hip-hop in the world. Hamilton is nothing like the typical (crappy) mainstream rap of the late 2010s or early 2020s. I ain't saying it will change your life or anything, but at least give it a shot. It is not even close to that "rap" (in a shitty animated movie capitalizing on a tragedy) you'll get from 90s soulless corporate greed, that doesn't understand one thing about the people, culture or genre, and only uses the most shallow parts. Another misuse of cultural appropriation, and greedy, rich white guys using Black culture to get ahead somewhere.I dunno Brawlman. Like, I have no moral objection to that idea, it's just that when I read the description all it does is make me think of all the rapping in 90's cartoons that people look back on and literally cringe at. But I haven't seen it, and you know I'm not much of a rap aficionado anyway so whatever. If you like it and it's good then good on you and the musical but I don't think it's my thing.
It's not really a false equivalency when they had some dark skin characters in Game of Thrones. I may not watch a lot of episodes, but I remember there being some dark skinned characters in the TV show. GoT is a fantasy setting any way? Am I wrong? Plus, it's not going to matter much when they're adding more people of color in the spinoff. So I can consider it fair game.I can't compare Berserk to anything, but if you're talking about stuff like Streets of Rage and Street Fighter, it's another false equivalence. Those two games take place in the 20th/21st centuries, with the former taking place entirely in the US (which is ethnically diverse), and the latter taking place all over the world and having easy travel.
Never said it was, nor had to constantly be. Whatever the case, I'm not going through this constant back and forth on it. I said my piece and I am moving the hell on. I was going through my little rant anyway.This isn't even something that's 1:1 with genre.
I feel that's unfair to the pigeons. At least they know when to scram.
I dunno Brawlman. Like, I have no moral objection to that idea, it's just that when I read the description all it does is make me think of all the rapping in 90's cartoons that people look back on and literally cringe at. But I haven't seen it, and you know I'm not much of a rap aficionado anyway so whatever. If you like it and it's good then good on you and the musical but I don't think it's my thing.
BrawlMan is right; you should give it a shot. I don't like [modern] musicals, I'm not a huge theater fan, and I don't particularly care for a lot of rap, so on the surface, Hamilton checked all the boxes for something I would hate. My girlfriend forced me to watch it and... I enjoyed the HELL out of Hamilton. It really surprised me. I had to admit, I understood the hype surrounding it after I watched it. Like BrawlMan said, it won't change your life, but I'm willing to bet it's nothing like you're imagining it to be. Recommended.Don't knock it, till you try it. Remember that there are so many different genres and levels of rap and hip-hop in the world. Hamilton is nothing like the typical (crappy) mainstream rap of the late 2010s or early 2020s. I ain't saying it will change your life or anything, but at least give it a shot. It is not even close to that "rap" (in a shitty animated movie capitalizing on a tragedy) you'll get from from 90s soulless corporate greed, that doesn't understand one thing about the people, culture or genre, and only uses the most shallow parts. Another misuse of cultural appropriation, and greedy, rich white guys using Black culture to get ahead somewhere.
Well then you haven't been paying attention to anything I've been saying. I've never said "X is here, therefore, it's 'forced diversity.'"I disagree. It's an asinine way of looking at things, to say "X is here, therefore, it's "forced diversity."
The problem is:And to be clear, I don't think comapring the MCU to the comics is a good idea. THe MCU isn't made for comic fans, the MCU is made for the plebs such as myself. I'd never heard of Falcon until Winter Soldier, I don't know, nor particuarly care what happened in the comics, and hate to burst your bubble, but Disney doesn't either. So whatever may or may not have happened in the comics is irrelevant in the MCU - Steve gives Sam the Shield, and then he gets a season to 'earn' it, so to speak. Not seeing the problem here.
Perhaps I'll give it a shot when an opportunity comes up then.BrawlMan is right; you should give it a shot. I don't like [modern] musicals, I'm not a huge theater fan, and I don't particularly care for a lot of rap, so on the surface, Hamilton checked all the boxes for something I would hate. My girlfriend forced me to watch it and... I enjoyed the HELL out of Hamilton. It really surprised me. I had to admit, I understood the hype surrounding it after I watched it. Like BrawlMan said, it won't change your life, but I'm willing to bet it's nothing like you're imagining it to be. Recommended.
I think it's still on Disney+; I'll be interested to hear your feedback once you see it. Never in my life have three things I don't actively like combined to make something I thoroughly enjoyed.Perhaps I'll give it a shot when an opportunity comes up then.