Tumgik
#Racism in hollywood
blackfilmmakers · 10 months
Text
84 notes · View notes
dasphinxone · 6 months
Text
Stay shitty and racist, Hollywood.
https://x.com/thefablemans/status/1767665834049053135?s=20
Tumblr media
5 notes · View notes
Text
Ke Huy Quan Lost Health Insurance Because He Couldn't Land a Job
41 notes · View notes
princeescaluswords · 2 years
Note
Is calling Allison Argent “anything with a pulse” not being used in a misogynist context? / You tell me, Pew. Is calling and reducing Allison Argent to "Scott's dead white girlfriend" not misogynist? You are the one who used those words after all
Tumblr media
I would usually put something like this in the trash bin, but you brought up something that I want to talk about: context.
I did say the words "Scott's dead white girlfriend" because I was expressing my displeasure with the show's writing in Apotheosis (5x20). In it, for those who might not know, Scott is fighting with The Beast, Sebastien Valet, who by sheer coincidence (something else that displeased me) shoves his claws into the back of Scott's neck, thereby seeing images of Scott's memories of Allison.
I would argue that describing Allison in Apotheosis as "Scott's dead white girlfriend" is not misogynist because, at the time, she was actually dead, she has always been white, and the memories in which she was appearing were flashbacks to romantic and emotional scenes between them. So yes, I did describe Scott's dead white girlfriend as "Scott's dead white girlfriend."
But why did I do it? Why was I disappointed by Allison's appearance in Apotheosis? Well, that's something I feel is worth talking about.
Contrary to some people's opinions, I've never been shy about talking about how the writers of Teen Wolf fed into fandom and Hollywood racism by establishing repeatedly that Scott, to be a hero, can never act in behalf of his own emotions, but must overcome adversity and pain only to be in service to others. Don't get me wrong, it's a noble characteristic, and one that makes me like Scott, but it became racist when the production veered, as it so often did, into making it mandatory, in a way they never did for any other especially white character. It seemed to me that in Season 5, the writers had characters forget that Scott didn't seek to become a werewolf, he didn't seek to become an alpha, and so had his own mother give him a speech in Status Asthmaticus (5x10) in which she told him, essentially, that he had to let people abuse him in order to be a good leader. In a similar vein, The writers had Mason say that Scott had to forgive Liam in Damnatio Memoriae (5x12). Fighting to preserve the lives that would be lost to La Bête du Gévaudan isn't enough, Scott has to let people like Stiles and Malia and Liam hurt him and the Beast himself violate him to justify his own survival.
DEAD. In keeping with that injustice, the violation of Scott's memories in Apotheosis is portrayed as a triumph. It's just another thing that Scott has to sacrifice to save people, and the writers were very eager to portray this as necessary. "Allison saved him," Stiles tells Lydia, but the truth is -- Allison is dead (at that point). She didn't save shit. Scott isn't dead, but the writers hardly care. How does Scott feel about another serial killer rooting around in his head? We'll never know. The writers put the consequences of that into Things That Are Unnecessary, such as Mason's reaction to being the host for Valet.
WHITE. We all know how hard Kira got screwed as a character in Season 5B. We know that scenes elaborating on Kira's time in the desert was cut, and the way that she was written out was flaming hot garbage, to be compounded later by the "her story was finished" crap of Season 6. Contrary to the Asshole Anon's rantings, I do pay attention to the way the production treated Kira and Arden Cho, and while I also know that Jeff Davis placed special narrative importance on Scott and Allison's relationship, the execution of Kira and Scott's relationship in 5B (especially the Cheap-Ass Green Screen scene) managed to damage the relationship for the audience in a totally unnecessary way, compounded by the fact that after 5x20, Scott never mentioned Kira again.
So yes, I was critical of how they employed Allison in Apotheosis, and I said so. If they wanted to show how powerful Scott's love for others and willingness to sacrifice they could have spent more time on how that affected Scott. The dynamics of Scott saying goodbye to Kira at Shiprock and then very next scene having him wordlessly focus on Allison (instead of letting Stiles tell Lydia about it, it should have been Scott) are just terrible. I don't think that describing how the production messed up is misogynist at all.
Indeed, one of the things I loved most about the movie is that there wasn't a hint of Scott having to justify his survival in how he treats other people, especially in how he treats Allison.
20 notes · View notes
stoplookingup · 1 year
Text
I have a feeling when Maureen Ryan's book "Burn It Down" comes out in a few days and we find out the truth about Sleepy Hollow, it's gonna be a lot more horrifying than a headless horseman.
10 notes · View notes
light-miracles · 2 years
Note
Even POC are disliking RoP.
It's like if we thought for ourselves instead of liking what the media says we have to like. Wild.
It's ALMOST like if the color of your skin isn't the basis of your personality and preferences. SO WILD.
16 notes · View notes
wondernwriter · 1 year
Text
2 notes · View notes
lyledebeast · 2 years
Text
I’m gonna stop posting about this movie someday, but . . . today is not that day!
The filmmakers lazily dismiss the idea of racism in the movie by making its hero, a South Carolina farmer with enough social standing to be invited to a Charlestown assembly, not an enslaver, but the problems persist.  It’s not enough that Benjamin Martin is not explicitly racist himself when no Black person in the movie has any priority or purpose other than protecting White people. 
*For the purposes of this meta, I’ve chosen to focus on Black characters tasked with protecting Martin’s children for the sake of (ha!) brevity.  Occam and his fellow militiamen’s response to him is a whole other clown show that deserves its own meta.
If we look behind Martin when he rushes to get between Colonel Tavington’s gun and his children, we see that his Black housekeeper, Abigale, is also pulling the children behind her, using her own body as a shield in case the ball misses their father. When Abigale is taken into British custody along with the rest of Martin’s employees, all her protestations focus on the children is she is being take from.  When she, for reasons never made clear, appears in the sea island community of free Black people, her sole line is “why it’s the children!” when Martin’s brood arrives to, again, be placed under Black protection.
The people the children’s aunt enslaves are not so lucky.  When Tavington arrives seeking Martin’s children, the only people he finds are enslaved men who come out of their quarters to see what all the ruckus is.  He asks them where Martin’s children are and shoots them when they fail to answer.  This violence appears to exist in the narrative for shock value . . . except it’s not that shocking.  When Tavington first appears in the story, before he shoots one of Martin’s children, one of the Black men he kidnaps points out that they “work this land as free men.” At the moment, though, they are acting as orderlies in the field hospital Martin has set up for Continental and British wounded, a task that is well outside their job description if they are indeed freemen.  
Martin involves his Black employees in his rash decisions, and they are forced to share in the consequences.  While the ones who work for Martin loose whatever measure of freedom they had, those on Charlotte’s plantation suffer a more permanent loss.  Martin has left his children, who have already been targeted by the British once, in the care not only of their aunt but the enslaved people who live with her in the expectation that she and they will die to protect them if need be.  The plantation also turns out to be a location so obvious that Tavington learns the children are there by asking a Loyalist in his own regiment.  Again, Martin’s thoughtlessness not only endangers his children but visits consequences on Black people who, in this case, definitely had no choice in the matter.
Ultimately, Martin not being an enslaver is a technicality.  Connection with him and his family brings nothing but peril to Black people, peril that goes largely unnoticed by Martin, his family, and the narrative generally. And yet all the Black people in the movie seem delighted to serve him.  It’s Gone with the Wind with more realistic war violence.
5 notes · View notes
afragmentcastadrift · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
Current read
2 notes · View notes
cinemaquiles · 1 year
Video
youtube
Você sabia? Era assim que os estúdios de Hollywood tratavam atores e atrizes na chamada Era de Ouro!
1 note · View note
hotvintagepoll · 1 month
Note
philip ahn was an old hollywood character actor, mostly underused in stereotypical bit parts but i always remember him bc of this brief scene in something to sing about (1937), which is kind of shocking in how forthright it is in addressing asian-american stereotypes (sadly he isn't in the rest of the movie much) cw for containing examples of said racist stereotyping
https://youtu.be/bUQff8S7jJE
Thank you for this. This is a wonderful clip, showcasing a wonderful actor. (Huge content warning for the first 30 seconds.)
youtube
I've actually put Philip Ahn in two Dracula polls already—he was up for the First Mate and (as a much older man) Mr. Swales. I wish I had known about him for the first Hot & Vintage Movie Man Tournament—he was smoking back in the day!
Tumblr media
103 notes · View notes
Note
Ah yes, Strange Worlds. The movie whose existence I only know of because a YouTuber mentioned in a video just how much Disney isn't promoting it. Imagine how much it would piss them off if we all banded together, hyped it up and made it a massive success....
Let's do it ppl!!! Like they re-released mobius because we turned it into a meme we can do this!!
mod ali
35 notes · View notes
alwaysbewoke · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
154 notes · View notes
Text
Out of curiosity, I googled "Roma actors" and found Paul Eryk Atlas, and I have to tell you, my ass would much more likely be in that movie theater seat with an actor who looks like this over a "big name" white actor who got to play Iron Man already for 100 years:
Tumblr media
27 notes · View notes
bonobochick · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
fandom criticism / racism is always loudest when the racebent character is a Black woman whose love interest is a white man. that seems to set those folks off like none other.
56 notes · View notes
wondernwriter · 1 year
Text
0 notes