Rose:
Verdict: Death.
Isn't that a little bit hars?
Rose:
Verdict: Death.
Maybe Finn wasn't a janitor at all, but worked in "Sanitation," as in operated huge machinery in the giant Starkiller interior that relates to plumbing, waterworks, etc.
We're talking about the black version of the cloth uniforms, not the black EV suits. Like this guy.Aren’t the black-clad troopers the Tie pilots? At least that’s the vibe I get from my Lego sets.
From what I've read she "doesn't fit the universe" or some nonsense. Personally, I found her the most refreshing of the characters in the new film, and was quite stricken by her personal hurt at the death of her sister.What's wrong with Rose?I quite liked her.
It might have changed, but, before, the black officer uniforms were stormtrooper officers.We're talking about the black version of the cloth uniforms, not the black EV suits. Like this guy.
Or this was Kathleen Kennedy's way of telling 2015/17 audiences that the only main black male character in the sequel trilogy is in a stereotyped, subservient job....and he's a screaming, bumbling clown, too....
Or that he’s too much of a fundamentally good person to be an effective mindless jackboot for a murderous totalitarian cult.
Finn--the only black male lead in the film--was still made a screaming, stumbling clown with one in a long line of historically stereotyped positions. Call him a janitor, or say he works in sanitation, but this follows a long Hollywood tradition in its treatment of black males, long criticized by random viewers, to civil rights workers, actors, et al. Finn's clowning, subservient character was the key takeaway in films released in 2015/2017, where some would make the crumbing argument that this sort of racial stereotype is not to be found in the work of so "enlightened" a group of entertainment producers.
Call him a janitor, or say he works in sanitation
What's wrong with Rose?I quite liked her.
I hereby commute her sentence from death to life in a coma.
You’ve said the same thing twice. Still a lot of claims, with no supporting examples from the text. For eg. Quotes, scenes, etc.
Who is Finn presented subservient to again? Because his ‘fumbling’ (aka. Not being fantastic at the cold blooded execution of innocent civilians,) kinda seems to be the opposite of ‘subservience’ when the context is a literal oppressive space neo Nazi regime.
(You’d think he and Phasma outright saying that his shitty service record with the FO was his form of rebellion, would hammer it in for extra obviousness. But apparently not.)
One could say that the age of the Hyper-Token Black character in a White film franchise (and even the cable television series) is a consequence of the Obama presidency. Those liberal Whites who voted for Obama, of which many Hollywood studio execs, White writers, directors and producers are a part, could no longer justify the lack of diversity in their films with their “supposed” racial tolerance.
But these liberal Whites cannot and will not concede full dramatic agency to a Black character, and nor will they share that agency equally between White and Black characters in a film; the Hyper-Token Black character is the compromise position that allows the White filmmakers the ability to feign racial diversity and tolerance, while retaining White control over the dramatic agency in a series of films.
But much like how the election and reelection of Barack Obama as the nation’s first Black president can do nothing to stem the violent injustices against Blacks around the country by law enforcement, racist terrorists, ineffectual Grand Juries, blind-eye prosecutors, hung juries and other sundry inequalities – because in the final act, Whites can insure that they can influence, change, control and survive the circumstances of their perfidy – so also is this political condition reflected within White controlled filmed entertainment as dramatic agency that supports a White supremacist illusion of dominance.
Speaking of, i note your resting a lot of your argument for racism on ‘the black man and white woman wont hook up.’ Admittedly, that is a rare pairing due to racist reasons. Be nice to see more. But do you know what pairing is even more rare?
A Black lead with an East Asian lead. Would you care to take some fucking guesses as to why?
Hint: Part of it has to do with the way white guys view East Asian women.
Not to me...I must be racistWhat more do you need other the fact he's a black male made to be a clown, works in sanitation and spends most of his screen time being an idiot. To anyone knowing the history of reducing black males to subservient clown roles in film (essentially, he's a 21st century Mantan Moreland), the message is loud and clear.
You're the one assigning the pejorative "clown" description to his character. In film, he's explicitly called a hero and makes personal sacrifices in the name of friends and his morality.What more do you need other the fact he's a black male made to be a clown
What more do you need other the fact he's a black male made to be a clown, works in sanitation and spends most of his screen time being an idiot. To anyone knowing the history of reducing black males to subservient clown roles in film (essentially, he's a 21st century Mantan Moreland), the message is loud and clear.
Adding to that, other points about Finn were covered by IndieWire's Andre Seewood in 2015:
There are no errors in Seewood's assessment.
Yet there's been less resistance to black males and East Asian females than one might think, especially over recent (21st century) history.
For a few examples, whether in higher-profile productions (Mekhi Phifer and Ming-Na Wen in ER, Sandra Oh and Isaiah Washington in Grey's Anatomy, a relationship between Corey Hawkins and Jing Tian's characters suggesting a growing union in Kong: Skull Island), or indies such as Face (Kristy Wu and Anthony Criss), there's no larger outcry as seen when the pairing is black male/white female.
This goes some way in explaining why those most vocal Star Wars fans who were almost begging for Rey to end up with anyone other than Finn (including psychotic Kylo Ren) are not saying much now that it appears Finn is going to be in a relationship with Rose.
You just did it again.
How. Is. Finn. Clownish?
If Seewood saw TLJ in 2015, then he’s very impressive indeed.
Lucky thing for you too. Otherwise, you might have to actually argue and support your own claims about TLJ like a big boy.
If you say it, then it must be so. Yeeep.
He doesn’t however, make the arguments that you’re attributing to him. A big difference being that he doesn’t actually review the movie.
One could say that the age of the Hyper-Token Black character in a White film franchise (and even the cable television series) is a consequence of the Obama presidency. Those liberal Whites who voted for Obama, of which many Hollywood studio execs, White writers, directors and producers are a part, could no longer justify the lack of diversity in their films with their “supposed” racial tolerance. But these liberal Whites cannot and will not concede full dramatic agency to a Black character, and nor will they share that agency equally between White and Black characters in a film; the Hyper-Token Black character is the compromise position that allows the White filmmakers the ability to feign racial diversity and tolerance,while retaining White control over the dramatic agency in a series of films.
because in the final act, Whites can insure that they can influence, change, control and survive the circumstances of their perfidy – so also is this political condition reflected within White controlled filmed entertainment as dramatic agency that supports a White supremacist illusion of dominance.
Oh, I can do that too. In fact, I can do it better.
Ah. When lacking actual examples, just say there’s nameless internet shippers.
No matter what you’re claiming, you can’t be wrong.
I was looking forward to that fight and appreciated it as a follow up from TFA's confrontation, were FInn moves from a less uncertain and overcompensation position to one of superiority, owning his new status as a "rebel."He's not the decision maker. He's not the true creator--or leader of missions, and as a bone tossed his way (I doubt anyone will get the emphasis on that), he has a pointless fight with Phasma which...no one was looking forward to, since the latter was completely undeveloped in TFA, and Finn as a sci-fi fighting hero does not exist. There's no build-up in a fight between an action figure design who happens to be talking on screen, and a walking racial stereotype.
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