dt61 said:
I was watching Donald Glover on Comedy Central Presents and it reminded me of the campaign for him to audition for the new Spider-Man. I personally don't mind because a character like Peter Parker is the everyman. I can't really think of any heroes that are normally white who absolutely have to be white.
What are your thoughts?
Actually Peter Parker is not an everyman. Like most super heroes he represents a sort of ideal. The angst driven Peter Parker of the Spider Man movies worked for that storyline, but it's far differant from the comics.
In the comics Peter Parker is a super-genius, he invents the web-shooters (gizmos) he employs himself, and routinely invents new kinds of webbing to deal with specific foes. It's also noteworthy that while viewed as something of a "nerd" and in conflict with jocks, he's also supposed to be quite handsome and charming. Felicia Hardy, the rich-girl school super star has a thing for him (and becomes The Black Cat, getting them together is a popular "what if" scenario) not to mention landing Gwen Stacy, and later Mary-Jane who is a super-model (and I mean this literally).
Spider-Man is one of those guys who is able to pretty much head into a high school chem lab with a couple drops of monster slime, kit-bash something effective against the creature (like a cure for the central mutation, a way of tracking it, a way of neutralizing it's power, or some special webbing that is especially effective) and similar things.
I think the tendency to humanize super heroes right now is a bad move, as it defeats the point of them being "super" to begin with.
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As far as the central question goes, I think the ethnicity of characters should be kept constant. I don't think casting a black guy as Spider Man is a good idea any more than I think casting The Black Panther (king of an African nation) as a white guy would be.
Given that there are few black comic book writers and artists (actually I can't think of any off the top of my head) blacks are pretty well represented in comics given minority status in the market nation and a general lack of involvement in the creative process. You just don't see many black guys wanting to go on to do coming books, and certainly not enough of them to produce the talent needed eventually wind up seeing something put out (like anything it's competitive, only a few people of the legions that want to do it make it, so you need to produce a vast community of people who are interested before a group is going to be represented). Asians became far more represented due to the large comic community (Manga) with time blending the two together, with a lot of people getting into western comics and/or talented people influancing the design.
That said, we've already seen attempts at ethnicity mixing with super heroes, and it generally wasn't pretty. I'm looking at the "Kingpin" in Daredevil, and at Halle Berry's take on "Catwoman" which even involved a full reboot of the character to explain it.
That said there are black comic characters that could probably hold down a movie if it was done correctly. I actually think you could make a good movie out of "Steel", especially if they did a Superman movie that ended with his apparent death as a cliffhanger, and then launched Steel before the second part picking up the plotline. "Spawn" is another character that I think more could be done with, he's already carried an okay (if not great) live action movie and a number of animated works. Then of course there are frequently mentioned characters like The Black Panther, Luke Cage, and War Machine. If someone wanted to dip into Wildstorm you've got Battalion who has been a major player for a long time, being field leader of the old Stormwatch after Bendix, leader of The Monarchy (which was cool but ultimatly failed), and of course now the leader of the new Stormwatch again. The "New Warriors" ages ago had a guy called "Night Thrasher" who was pretty cool, however he seemed to fizzle out for some reason. "Wild Cards" had a character called Black Shadow who was interesting in that he had like three or four differant identities concurrantly during the series and nobody really figured out that they were all the same guy (Black Shadow, Wall Walker, and others). He seemed to be the inspiration for the powers of DV8's "Frostbite" as he had the power to drain heat from things, including people's body heat. He also had wallcrawling, super strength (albiet at a fairly low level), and I believe darkness generation.
The point here being that while there are not as many black characters as there are white ones, there are some decent ones out there that could be used without having to try and change the traditional presentation of existing characters.
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Oh and as far as Wesley Snipes as Batman, I don't think that one would work even beyond the ethnic issues. The challenge of playing Batman isn't in the whole bit of him being Batman but carrying off the Bruce Wayne persona and convincingly making it seem like it could be the same guy. I'm not sure if Wesley Snipes could really play the naive Billionaire Playboy philanthropist. He'd want to insert too much of an attitude into it for him to really be Gotham's darling and present an imagine that would make it unthinkable that he could possibly be Batman.
On the other hand he might be able to carry off the rebooted version of Nighthawk from "Supreme Power".