| I just saw that Matt Damon movie about the future where all the rich people live on a spaceship, and I couldn't get over the fact that he's apparently the only Anglo dude left in future L.A and all the Latino folks adore him, including the orphanage nuns who treated him like the second coming. |
Earth to clueless pp: I have lived next door to a big public housing complex for over a decade. I've also entered public housing complexes in order to meet folks I knew there. Not one person has ever threatened to rape me or my daughter but plenty of people have said "hello" on the street. I'm sorry about your experience delivering pizza but I suspect the central reason for the way you were treated was that you were delivering pizza, not that you were a white woman. Now, it is possible that you got treated worse because you are a white woman but I suspect that anyone delivering pizza to that neighborhood would have a problem. Or did you find that African-American guys who delivered pizza did not run into trouble there? |
quo
Angelina Jolie in Lara Croft: Tomb Raider Angelina Jolie in Mr. and Mrs. Smith Halle Berry (Storm), Famke Janssen (Marvel Girl/Phoenix) in the Xmen franchise Scarlett Johannson in the Avengers/Captain American franchise Charlize Theron in Aeon Flux Charlie's Angels Jessica Alba in the Fantastic Four franchise Carrie-Anne Moss in Matrix Linda Hamilton in Terminator 2 Emma Watson in the Harry Potter series Jennifer Lawrence in the Hunger Games franchise Sure they're fewer and farther between, but there are many female heros in action adventure flicks. Even more if you want to include the Chinese martial arts films like Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, Forbidding Kingdom, Hero, etc. |
Let's try fixing up the HTML flags that I screwed up...
Add Denzel Washington, Will Smith, Wesley Snipes, Duane (the Rock) Johnson, Lawence Fishburne, Vin Diesel, Ving Rhames and it's one of the more well represented minorities.
Now these are the under-represented minorities. Aside from the martials artists like Jet Li and Jackie Chan (retired), there are very few Asian men in leading or hero roles. In 1967, it was innovative to have George Takei as a minor heroic character in Star Trek. 40+ years later and it's still one of the few big Asian characters and he's still a supporting character role. John Cho, Daniel Dae Kim are amongst the few Asians that have managed to break into non-martial arts movies and they are still very low supporting characters. Likewise, there aren't that many Hispanic males that are given significant heroic or leading roles. Antonio Banderas is one of the few that made it out of the supporting character category.
Sigourney Weaver in "Alien." Angelina Jolie in Lara Croft: Tomb Raider Angelina Jolie in Mr. and Mrs. Smith Halle Berry (Storm), Famke Janssen (Marvel Girl/Phoenix) in the Xmen franchise Scarlett Johannson in the Avengers/Captain American franchise Charlize Theron in Aeon Flux Charlie's Angels Jessica Alba in the Fantastic Four franchise Carrie-Anne Moss in Matrix Linda Hamilton in Terminator 2 Emma Watson in the Harry Potter series Jennifer Lawrence in the Hunger Games franchise Sure they're fewer and farther between, but there are many female heros in action adventure flicks. Even more if you want to include the Chinese martial arts films like Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, Forbidding Kingdom, Hero, etc. |
However integral Donald Woods was to Biko's story getting out, the fact is it's *Biko's* story. I don't think it's over-sensitive to think maybe a movie about Steve Biko would actually focus on the man himself. It's the difference between a movie about a man fighting apartheid and a movie about a journalist who helped a man fight apartheid. The journalist's story is only the more interesting one IF you're afraid white audiences won't connect with a black main character. |
Totally agree with OP and with adding the help to the list. But about the blind side, the white savior theme was only the second most awful thing about that movie for me - the MOST awful thing was the younger brother character, who was the most effing annoying child in a movie in the history of cinema. |
White guys did not have a problem. There were no black delivery guys at the time. They thought they could intimidate me but I was raised in a crime ridden neighborhood and I was not intimidated. The manager was worried about being liable. |
I'm impressed that you weren't intimidated. Sorry to hear that you had a hard time. |
I was young and stupid... and use to it from my neighborhood. Typical nothing will ever happen to me syndrome. |
I should add that I'm not saying white women never have a hard time in low-income black neighborhoods but the scene in the movie didn't even happen in the book. The author reported talking to a gang leader who told him that they would leave a kid like Michael Oher alone until he got through school. Gang leader never even talked to the Sandra Bullock character, let alone threaten her. And as I've noted above my experience has been completely different and I've tutored a kid in public housing for years. I've never heard of any of the white tutors being threatened so that their kids could work for a gang leader. Not saying it has never happened and obviously a lot of young kids get caught up in crime in my neighborhood (eg, there's one kid I had a run in with who turned out to be very bad news years later) but it bothers me that the movie perpetuates this fear of the inner city as if any stray white woman going to public housing will be threatened with rape immediately -- and it didn't even happen! |
Blind Side was also a biography, but the story as TOLD IN THE MOVIE was inaccurate and played up the family/mother "rescuing" the poor black boy. Don't be naive enough to think that 'based on a true story' makes it accurate |
She is not the only person it annoys http://www.baltimoreravens.com/news/article-1/The-Real-Michael-Oher/f766f1ad-4104-479d-a379-c3eeb82d9e17 WAKE UP PEOPLE -- JUST BECAUSE IT'S IN A MOVIE DOES NOT MEAN IT IS ACCURATE OR EVEN TRUE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! |
Thank you -- some people are deliberately OBTUSE. |
| As an aside, I do find it very, very funny that John Coffey (character) was confused with John Candy were confused. That's gotta count for some post-racial progress... |
|
I see a difference, at least somewhat, with the new Reese movie in that its really not about the black experience in America. Its about refugees in a post-conflict migration. Yes, being from S. Sudan and being black does inform the narrative, but its hard to conflate this entirely with narratives like The Help and The Blindside. I would venture to say their stories, their 'saving' is more in line with Cambodians in the early 80s than black Americans.
But I come from a place of studying/interest in post-conflict states which are often in developing nations in the last 30 years- its part of my job at a local university- so maybe that colors how I see this example. |