Yeah, this has the makings of the best friend ever.
Who can I call a racist?
Dennis, you're a racist!
Who can I call a racist?
Dennis, you're a racist!
Morgan Freeman may well make a great Bones, I happen to think that Denzel Washington would be superb as the Captain.
Tralah said:
Umm...since Leonard Nimoy is reprising his role of Spock in this movie, casting a black actor to play the younger version would be a bit hard on that suspension of disbelief. I'd have no problems if they wanted to recast some of the roles with actors in different ethnicities, but since this movie is not a reboot or reimagining, I can understand why they're aren't making even more radical diversions.
Samuel T. Cogley said:
Who can I call a racist?
Temis the Vorta said:
Morgan Freeman may well make a great Bones, I happen to think that Denzel Washington would be superb as the Captain.
I like that, too. But why bother calling it Star Trek? Every space-opera does not need to be based on Kirk, Spock etc. Maybe someone should cast those guys in an original space opera franchise. Right now, space opera is pretty sparse (especially on TV) and I'd like to see a lot more that has nothing at all to do with Trek other than the surface stuff - spaceships and rayguns and all that.
Starship Polaris said:
Kirk is from North America; Spock is from another planet; no ethnicity is implied.
Brutal Strudel said:
Funny how it's the former who gets dog-piled while the latter gets nothing from you guys. Keep up the good work! :thumbsup:
Vektor said:
Starship Polaris said:
Kirk is from North America; Spock is from another planet; no ethnicity is implied.
Ethnicity is implied at least as much as Kirk being from North America and Spock being from another planet.
Brutal Strudel said:
An aside: Though Akira Class was way too quick on calling racism when people objected to casting against racial type, Kelso's post--employing pernicious racial stereotypes to lampoon the very idea--betrayed as much racism as anything short of comig flat out and using a slur or tying a noose from an oak tree ("a prank," according to the Jena school board). Funny how it's the former who gets dog-piled while the latter gets nothing from you guys. Keep up the good work! :thumbsup:
Brutal Strudel said:
It's modern day minstrel pidgin: the fact that some blacks--the most educationally and economically disadvantaged among us--actually do speak that way makes it no less racially incendiary. Indeed, by insinuating that all blacks--even highly intelligent, highly intellectual (not synonymous), highly educated Starfleet officers (cf. Sisko and Tuvok) speak that way, it is astoundingly bigotted. Just a joke? I've heard a lot of jokes: the Klan has millions of 'em.
Corinthian7 said:
Temis the Vorta said:
Morgan Freeman may well make a great Bones, I happen to think that Denzel Washington would be superb as the Captain.
I like that, too. But why bother calling it Star Trek? Every space-opera does not need to be based on Kirk, Spock etc. Maybe someone should cast those guys in an original space opera franchise. Right now, space opera is pretty sparse (especially on TV) and I'd like to see a lot more that has nothing at all to do with Trek other than the surface stuff - spaceships and rayguns and all that.
I completely agree with your point, although I do have to admit that ever since I saw Crimson Tide I've always wanted to see Denzel Washington play a Captain in a Trek movie!
Brutal Strudel said:
Vektor said:
Starship Polaris said:
Kirk is from North America; Spock is from another planet; no ethnicity is implied.
Ethnicity is implied at least as much as Kirk being from North America and Spock being from another planet.
Sisko was was North America (so was Sulu, for that matter) and Tuvok was from the same planet as Spock. Just sayin'...
CaptainDonovin said:
Guess I was wrong.
CaptainDonovin said:
I thought this was supposed to be a simple topic of who's playing Kirk. Guess I was wrong.
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