I thought the characters in this thing were asians?
I thought the characters in this thing were asians?
Bingo!They were based on Asian cultures, but that doesn't mean they were actually Asian.
To make a point I made on the Avatar boards, where there is a sizable group of Trek fans, to act like the characters in Avatar are actually physically from Asia is to act like the Ligonians from "Code of Honor" were actually from Africa, even though in-universe they said they were native to Ligon II.
So, unless the creators come out and say that it was set in Asia, and not an entirely fictional world which was based as much on Western cultural concepts as it was on Asian cultural concepts, I have no problem with the casting.
They were based on Asian cultures, but that doesn't mean they were actually Asian.
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So, unless the creators come out and say that it was set in Asia, and not an entirely fictional world which was based as much on Western cultural concepts as it was on Asian cultural concepts, I have no problem with the casting.
How is it Hollywood's fault if the mass public won't turn out for a film with an all Asian cast?They were based on Asian cultures, but that doesn't mean they were actually Asian.
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So, unless the creators come out and say that it was set in Asia, and not an entirely fictional world which was based as much on Western cultural concepts as it was on Asian cultural concepts, I have no problem with the casting.
That's a spurious, straw-man argument. It has nothing remotely to do with the real issues here. Nobody's saying they actually come from Asia, because obviously they don't. The point is that there's a long history of racism in Hollywood and it has disturbing implications when three heroic characters who are visibly non-Western in appearance as well as culture in the original incarnation are all played by white actors. This isn't at all about the "actual" ethnicity of these fictional characters. It's about the ethnic politics of our world, about whether Hollywood is afraid of letting Asian actors headline a movie as its heroes.
But the controversy have after all spawned the quite amusing "racebending"-issue, where a few people spam the commentary section of very every "Last Airbender" news report about how racist Hollywood is...
- How come most anime has main characters that do not look Japanese at all? (blue or green eyes, blond or red hair)
Hell, explain to me why anime has so many adults with the facial features of six year old children.
And it's even grosser with hentai - it's hard to imagine how anyone other than pedophiles could get off on that stuff.
Visual variety.What I find curious about this race issue is this...
- How come most anime has main characters that do not look Japanese at all? (blue or green eyes, blond or red hair)
The creators were huge fans of eastern art/cultural products.- And "Avatar: The Last Airbender" - being an american show - has asian characters?
The point is that there's a long history of racism in Hollywood and it has disturbing implications when three heroic characters who are visibly non-Western in appearance as well as culture in the original incarnation are all played by white actors.
That's why the whole "but Sokka and Katara have blue eyes" thing is either disingenuous or misinformed. Everything about the world is Asian. The characters are supposed to be Asian/Inuit in 'real' terms, in the same way that the cast of Lord of the Rings is clearly supposd to be white, even though it's a fantasy world (technically, it's supposed to be a lost past of our own world).
Well, to me, the show's Aang looks just as "white" as the movie version.
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