Don't be stupid, I would have raged as much if they portrayed Jim Rhodes (Warmachine) as a white guy. Respect the source material. I don't want a black Captain America and I don't want a white Black Panther. And yes, the color does matter if you are basing a role in a movie of an existing character. As much as his demeanor, his haircut and his clothes.mr_rubino said:"I've outgrown such silly superstitions. I don't see race. DAMNED DARKIES IN MY COMICS BOOK MOVIES *roid rage* THE COLOR OF THE CHARACTER IS TOTALLY AN IMPORTANT FEATURE!!!"The Human Torch said:This, plus the fact that Thor is WHITE, BLUE EYED AND BLOND IN THE COMIC BOOK! The same comic book they are using as source material. Have some goddamn respect for the source material and actually type-cast actors. I don't give two craps about race, color of skin and what not, my own freaking girlfriend is of a different color than I am. I have outgrown concepts like racism that no longer have a place in this world. I wish that Hollywood, Penny Arcade and the majority of the posters here would do that too.Vrud said:"Heimdall (Old Norse Heimdallr, modern Icelandic Heimdallur) is one of the æsir (gods) in Norse mythology, in the Edda called the "white god" (hvítastr ása "whitest of the aesir Sæm 72ª; hvíta ás "white as" Sn. 104)."
I raged when I found out they used the Ultimate (black) Colonel Fury for Iron man and I raged when I saw what Micheal Bay did to the Transformers. RESPECT THE SOURCE MATERIAL, YOU WANKERS!
I think there's a difference between main characters (and important secondary characters) and what is basically a bit character. Seriously what importance has Heimdall had in the last sixty odd years of comics? He guards a bridge and ocaisonally forsees danger. That's probably all we'll see in this movie.The Human Torch said:Don't be stupid, I would have raged as much if they portrayed Jim Rhodes (Warmachine) as a white guy. Respect the source material. I don't want a black Captain America and I don't want a white Black Panther. And yes, the color does matter if you are basing a role in a movie of an existing character. As much as his demeanor, his haircut and his clothes.
I'm sure that'll be kept that in mind once the Caps and Blacks movies come around. As for the peripheral characters of absolutely no consequence, it'll pretty much open season on race for them. Next!The Human Torch said:Don't be stupid, I would have raged as much if they portrayed Jim Rhodes (Warmachine) as a white guy. Respect the source material. I don't want a black Captain America and I don't want a white Black Panther.mr_rubino said:"I've outgrown such silly superstitions. I don't see race. DAMNED DARKIES IN MY COMICS BOOK MOVIES *roid rage* THE COLOR OF THE CHARACTER IS TOTALLY AN IMPORTANT FEATURE!!!"The Human Torch said:This, plus the fact that Thor is WHITE, BLUE EYED AND BLOND IN THE COMIC BOOK! The same comic book they are using as source material. Have some goddamn respect for the source material and actually type-cast actors. I don't give two craps about race, color of skin and what not, my own freaking girlfriend is of a different color than I am. I have outgrown concepts like racism that no longer have a place in this world. I wish that Hollywood, Penny Arcade and the majority of the posters here would do that too.Vrud said:"Heimdall (Old Norse Heimdallr, modern Icelandic Heimdallur) is one of the æsir (gods) in Norse mythology, in the Edda called the "white god" (hvítastr ása "whitest of the aesir Sæm 72ª; hvíta ás "white as" Sn. 104)."
I raged when I found out they used the Ultimate (black) Colonel Fury for Iron man and I raged when I saw what Micheal Bay did to the Transformers. RESPECT THE SOURCE MATERIAL, YOU WANKERS!
Hey, we gotta protect the racial purity of the made-up characters somehow. If we have a black Heimdal, then who knows what side characters could be next? Do you want your children exposed to the possibility of a Polynesian Cloak and Guatemalan Dagger in the next Spiderman movie? That's a world I can't live in.WolfThomas said:I think there's a difference between main characters (and important secondary characters) and what is basically a bit character. Seriously what importance has Heimdall had in the last sixty odd years of comics? He guards a bridge and ocaisonally forsees danger. That's probably all we'll see in this movie.The Human Torch said:Don't be stupid, I would have raged as much if they portrayed Jim Rhodes (Warmachine) as a white guy. Respect the source material. I don't want a black Captain America and I don't want a white Black Panther. And yes, the color does matter if you are basing a role in a movie of an existing character. As much as his demeanor, his haircut and his clothes.
Everyone's making a mountain out of a mole-hill.
There are plenty of Nordic actors, I'd say that's good enough. We've got one playing Beorn in The Hobbit, for instance.emeraldrafael said:Probably cause it was mostly filmed there. And there's a lot of British Actors. How many Norse actors do you see nowadays?enriel said:If the adaptation is trying to remain faithful and the character is depicted as a certain race, they should probably stick with that race. If they're taking artistic license, then that's fine by me.
Nobody calls racist on J.K. Rowling for only allowing Brits to be cast in the Harry Potter movies...
If a white man played an African god, then the film would be cancelled because of some black elitists. I'm against this completely! Why is it that when a white man does something small, he is considered 'racist', but when another race does something of a higher caliber, nothing happens? Fucking hypocrisy, if you ask me!joystickjunki3 said:That's not exactly what I was asking. I asked about how people might feel if a white man was chosen to play an African god. I don't care about the current situation; it does not matter to me if Thor is a comic book or not.Amy Sorel said:Thor is a comicbook superhero based on Norse mythology, it IS NOT Norse mythology. End.
For hundreds of years Jesus was drawn as tall white guy with blond flowing hair and pale skin, when he probably was a short guy with dark curly hair and very tanned skin.
Pretty much this.burzummaniac said:If a white man played an African god, then the film would be cancelled because of some black elitists. I'm against this completely! Why is it that when a white man does something small, he is considered 'racist', but when another race does something of a higher caliber, nothing happens? Fucking hypocrisy, if you ask me!joystickjunki3 said:That's not exactly what I was asking. I asked about how people might feel if a white man was chosen to play an African god. I don't care about the current situation; it does not matter to me if Thor is a comic book or not.Amy Sorel said:Thor is a comicbook superhero based on Norse mythology, it IS NOT Norse mythology. End.
For hundreds of years Jesus was drawn as tall white guy with blond flowing hair and pale skin, when he probably was a short guy with dark curly hair and very tanned skin.
Metaphorgotten?TheDarkestDerp said:Well... some people would be pretty upset about it, as is their right. It is their religious belief being stepped on after all, and even if the rest of the world doesn't hold it, it doesn't mean they can't respect it. Heimdall was supposed to be "the whitest among white" and he should be so in the movie. It's not racist or mean or whatever, it was the belief system of a specific group of people. Even if it is a comic book superhero story now, it's all just a metter of time before the great events of our day become the legends of the future, and eventually fade into myth.
In a few thousand years, who knows? Abe Lincoln may be a black man facing down an army of Confederate cyber-ninjas with his elite Gymkata skillz, and forums online will be having this same discussion then, too.
It wasn't really an unfocused thought. I had this in my mind pretty much since the whole hobbit fiasco.mr_rubino said:Pretty much this.burzummaniac said:If a white man played an African god, then the film would be cancelled because of some black elitists. I'm against this completely! Why is it that when a white man does something small, he is considered 'racist', but when another race does something of a higher caliber, nothing happens? Fucking hypocrisy, if you ask me!joystickjunki3 said:That's not exactly what I was asking. I asked about how people might feel if a white man was chosen to play an African god. I don't care about the current situation; it does not matter to me if Thor is a comic book or not.Amy Sorel said:Thor is a comicbook superhero based on Norse mythology, it IS NOT Norse mythology. End.
For hundreds of years Jesus was drawn as tall white guy with blond flowing hair and pale skin, when he probably was a short guy with dark curly hair and very tanned skin.
And by "pretty much this", I mean "pretty much this" is the kind of emotional, unfocused thinking that seems to be the basis for any of the complaints on this hilarious non-issue so far.
So like I said, unfocused. Not really about the topic. Just about the white man being kept down in various and sundry situations. And "black elitists" in hypothetical situations. And not being racist.burzummaniac said:It wasn't really an unfocused thought. I had this in my mind pretty much since the whole hobbit fiasco.mr_rubino said:Pretty much this.burzummaniac said:If a white man played an African god, then the film would be cancelled because of some black elitists. I'm against this completely! Why is it that when a white man does something small, he is considered 'racist', but when another race does something of a higher caliber, nothing happens? Fucking hypocrisy, if you ask me!joystickjunki3 said:That's not exactly what I was asking. I asked about how people might feel if a white man was chosen to play an African god. I don't care about the current situation; it does not matter to me if Thor is a comic book or not.Amy Sorel said:Thor is a comicbook superhero based on Norse mythology, it IS NOT Norse mythology. End.
For hundreds of years Jesus was drawn as tall white guy with blond flowing hair and pale skin, when he probably was a short guy with dark curly hair and very tanned skin.
And by "pretty much this", I mean "pretty much this" is the kind of emotional, unfocused thinking that seems to be the basis for any of the complaints on this hilarious non-issue so far.
Ah, ok then.mr_rubino said:So like I said, unfocused. Not really about the topic. Just about the white man being kept down in various and sundry situations. And "black elitists" in hypothetical situations. And not being racist.burzummaniac said:It wasn't really an unfocused thought. I had this in my mind pretty much since the whole hobbit fiasco.mr_rubino said:Pretty much this.burzummaniac said:If a white man played an African god, then the film would be cancelled because of some black elitists. I'm against this completely! Why is it that when a white man does something small, he is considered 'racist', but when another race does something of a higher caliber, nothing happens? Fucking hypocrisy, if you ask me!joystickjunki3 said:That's not exactly what I was asking. I asked about how people might feel if a white man was chosen to play an African god. I don't care about the current situation; it does not matter to me if Thor is a comic book or not.Amy Sorel said:Thor is a comicbook superhero based on Norse mythology, it IS NOT Norse mythology. End.
For hundreds of years Jesus was drawn as tall white guy with blond flowing hair and pale skin, when he probably was a short guy with dark curly hair and very tanned skin.
And by "pretty much this", I mean "pretty much this" is the kind of emotional, unfocused thinking that seems to be the basis for any of the complaints on this hilarious non-issue so far.
I think I have an idea of what would happen. There would be this one really pissed off group of black people who think all african gods should be black. Nobody else would really care. Also, there would be a thread about it on the escapist in which most people either said that the director can do what he wants, or that they should stick to their source material.joystickjunki3 said:What would happen if a white man was cast as an African god?
Yeah but, whats to stop a Norse God from appearing as a black man if he wanted to?WrongSprite said:Not Norse Gods...hence why they had to put on disguises sometimes, to fool the giants.008Zulu said:They're Gods, they can choose to appear as they wish.
This wins - we're not dealing with people's actual bloody gods here, and especially not gods that "belong" to anyone alive today.Amy Sorel said:Thor is a comicbook superhero based on Norse mythology, it IS NOT Norse mythology. End.
That's because they don't only have Brits in Harry Potter films, although it's easier for them with the students to have them all British.enriel said:If the adaptation is trying to remain faithful and the character is depicted as a certain race, they should probably stick with that race. If they're taking artistic license, then that's fine by me.
Nobody calls racist on J.K. Rowling for only allowing Brits to be cast in the Harry Potter movies...