Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I remember when they were outraged Dunkirk had no black characters.
A friggin WW2 movie in Europe where the English were trying to escape for their lives……and they’re mad because that historical story has no major presence of black people. Truly insane how DEI is a de facto cult. You can’t even tell stories from history now as they were.
Ok.
I’m the op if this thread…surprised to see it pop up again!
I’m fine with historical films using actors that make sense rather than inserting diversity for the sake of diversity. But any slavery-era film will have black and white actors. And black men did fight in WWII.
But if you rewatch mainstream movies from the 1980s primarily made for a teenage audience—like Footloose—you’ll realize Hollywood made a choice to not include black actors in even a token way. It begs the question…why?
The dance scene is what is most stark, particularly given this was the era of dance films and breakdancing.
Anonymous wrote:I remember when they were outraged Dunkirk had no black characters.
A friggin WW2 movie in Europe where the English were trying to escape for their lives……and they’re mad because that historical story has no major presence of black people. Truly insane how DEI is a de facto cult. You can’t even tell stories from history now as they were.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My family is from rural Kansas. There weren’t black people in their town. It was a farming town and pretty much all white. Theirs was settled by Germans and still had a lot of German customs. If there were 8% blacks in Kansas, they were more likely in the big cities.
Exactly. Context of the place and time.
That’s not an excuse to people who raise this issue. The past must be reimagined to confirm with DEI standards because that is how it always should have been. If you object to that you’re a racist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My family is from rural Kansas. There weren’t black people in their town. It was a farming town and pretty much all white. Theirs was settled by Germans and still had a lot of German customs. If there were 8% blacks in Kansas, they were more likely in the big cities.
Exactly. Context of the place and time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My family is from rural Kansas. There weren’t black people in their town. It was a farming town and pretty much all white. Theirs was settled by Germans and still had a lot of German customs. If there were 8% blacks in Kansas, they were more likely in the big cities.
Exactly. Context of the place and time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just finished rewatching Footloose.
Filmed in 1984 when 12% of the American population was Black, yet there are zero Black kids in a movie about dancing.
Remember the big dance scene at the end? They had white guys breakdancing. This was at the height of the breakdancing craze btw. All white cast, and they didn’t even bother to add any Black or brown dancers in the big school dance. Zero.
Pretty shocking.
So what. Move on. It’s a great movie. Not every fictional movie, tv show, play, etc. has to have a diverse cast just because. You’ll always have outrage if you see everything in life with a racial lens. Get outraged about something else like how Roe vs. Wade was overturned, how many people will go hungry tonight in the USA, or the lack of gun control.
Anonymous wrote:My family is from rural Kansas. There weren’t black people in their town. It was a farming town and pretty much all white. Theirs was settled by Germans and still had a lot of German customs. If there were 8% blacks in Kansas, they were more likely in the big cities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just finished rewatching Footloose.
Filmed in 1984 when 12% of the American population was Black, yet there are zero Black kids in a movie about dancing.
Remember the big dance scene at the end? They had white guys breakdancing. This was at the height of the breakdancing craze btw. All white cast, and they didn’t even bother to add any Black or brown dancers in the big school dance. Zero.
Pretty shocking.
There is a lot of racism and other issues from the 80s. Everyone has to acknowledge that b/c it is patently obvious. That doesn't mean I don't love the movies or still watch them.
One of my all time faves is 16 Candles. I know just about every line. But, damn, some of that is SUPER cringe. Like, how did we not all see it or acknowledge it for what it was. THe whole Long Duck Dong thing. And Samantha being mortified that her friend may have suggested she "do it on a cloud" with a black guy. . . . Plus the lack of representation that OP notes.
Anonymous wrote:Just finished rewatching Footloose.
Filmed in 1984 when 12% of the American population was Black, yet there are zero Black kids in a movie about dancing.
Remember the big dance scene at the end? They had white guys breakdancing. This was at the height of the breakdancing craze btw. All white cast, and they didn’t even bother to add any Black or brown dancers in the big school dance. Zero.
Pretty shocking.
Anonymous wrote:There were black people in Kansas in the 80s.
Regardless: go back and watch movies from the 1980s, and you’ll notice a total lack of any diversity. The lack of *any* representation—even a token amount—is glaring.