No, he's not saying he didn't think the matter through; he's saying he thought it through, and came to the wrong conclusion. It's certainly possible to overthink things to your own detriment. See: the idiotic secrecy around Khan being in Into Darkness, which likely contributed to casting a white actor for a non-white role. More thinking doesn't in of itself guarantee coming to the correct conclusion.The attitude "don't overanalyze" is what led to the mistake Feige is now apologizing for.
And yet, he doesn't say what answer he should have gone with.Did you read Feige's comments? “We thought we were being so smart, and so cutting-edge... We’re not going to do the cliché of the wizened, old, wise Asian man. But it was a wake-up call to say, ‘Well, wait a minute, is there any other way to figure it out? Is there any other way to both not fall into the cliché and cast an Asian actor?’ And the answer to that, of course, is yes.” (Emphasis added.)
The common denominator here is Benedict Cumberbatch.No, he's not saying he didn't think the matter through; he's saying he thought it through, and came to the wrong conclusion. It's certainly possible to overthink things to your own detriment. See: the idiotic secrecy around Khan being in Into Darkness, which likely contributed to casting a white actor for a non-white role. More thinking doesn't in of itself guarantee coming to the correct conclusion.
And yet, he doesn't say what answer he should have gone with.
No, he's not saying he didn't think the matter through; he's saying he thought it through, and came to the wrong conclusion.
And yet, he doesn't say what answer he should have gone with.
They could have cast someone like Lou Diamond Phillips or my daughters!![]()
We can't cast the role as Asian because that'd be a stereotype.
We can't cast someone else in the role because that'd be whitewashing.
It's not like the only two choices are Asian or white.
He said on social media it would be his last Marvel movie also. I guess we will see more DC movies from him in future.Gunn has also hinted he's done after Volume 3 because he'll have completed the stories he set out to tell.
Almost any combination of ethnic mentor, white student is a trope at this point, the most famous being:
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/MagicalNegro
Sure, but simply being a black mentor doesn't make someone a Magical Negro, not if they don't fit the other aspects of the trope. It's all in the execution.
Or they could've just cast a non-white actor as Doctor Strange himself and avoided the whole "ethnic mentor to white hero" thing altogether. Feature films are lagging way behind television in the inclusiveness game, though at least the MCU is finally starting to catch up.
Comparing apples to apples, feature films depicting superheroes that were created as white seem to be right in line with their television brethren.
That's the story I heard.Didn't he also say he was getting too old for all of the shirtless scenes?
I'm not sure what you're saying. If you're saying it's normal to for film or TV to keep white characters white, that hasn't been the case for quite a few years. The list of white characters played by actors of color is quite long now.
And we're talking about a movie where both the Ancient One and Mordo had their ethnicities changed; why should it be any harder to change the title character's ethnicity? Especially if the goal was to avoid the white savior/ethnic mentor cliche.
I'm thinking Dr. Strange being a bigger gun as it were was almost never going to be considered anything but white.
At this very moment, this is changing a bit with Supergirl and Hawkman and hopefully Superman, but that's still not on the screen just yet.
The problem seems to be with Batman, Superman, Flash, Green Arrow, Spider-Man, Hulk, Wonder Woman, Supergirl, and so forth.
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