Movies are just a hard sell on that because they keep throwing white dudes into lead roles and it keeps selling so damn well. Not that minority leads don't sell, but studios seem extremely risk adverse. Even more so than in the past considering how much international markets matter to Hollywood now.Broomstick wrote:Whoopi Goldberg had quite a bit to say about that – she's won an Oscar, has a star on Hollywood's Walk of Fame, and finds it's very, very hard to get roles despite all that. Yesterday I caught a bit of her on TV and she emphasized that black actors don't want quota, they want equal opportunities and a level playing field.
Haven't they spoken up though? For all the hang wringing on social media: people are still lining up to buy tickets. The Hollywood protagonist list is about as diverse as AAA video games casting.Jackson is an outlier – and really, he's a good thing because 75 years ago NO black man would have been in his position. It's time to move from token black superstars to, outside of productions where race is a crucial plot point, to a situation where black actors like Jackson and Goldberg get as many lead role offers as their white counterparts. That's not going to happen overnight and can't happen by decree. One thing the general public can do is speak up, on social media, in what they purchase or pay to see. Money talks.
Fair enough, but Green Mile really was his breakout role. After that, more people would know him as Duncan than Big Black Guy. I would have been more surprised had that cast someone like Kevin Brown (30 Rock). Billable is billable. For another crazy comic book example: Michael Keaton as Batman. Or Hell, now: Ben Afleck is Batman. They'll literally put any white guy with a name at the front of a million/billion dollar franchise. Even Downey Jr. after some mega-huge breakdowns (though he did make Iron Man the cash-cow it is today). But a black guy? Not seeing any good examples for them going out on a limb for minorities.Duncan was cast for The Green Mile over 17 years ago, for Daredevil!movie more than 13 years ago... there has been some progress since then. You have to keep the timeline in mind when discussing these things.
Sticking with the Marvel example: they haven't exactly changed much over the years. The Avengers cast isn't exactly filled with nobodies. Least billable would probably be Mark Ruffalo and that guy has a laundry list of pre-Avengers work. They might have taken a risk with Pre-Thor Chris Hemsworth (for Thor, not Avengers obviously), but holy shit look at that guy. I don't think he was born, more like he punched his way out of a marble statue.Jackman and Marsden weren't big stars at the time. Wolverine was Jackman's break-out role, it was what gained him sufficient recognition to become an international star. Marsden... not quite so much, he's still a B-list actor. Patrick Stewart and Halle Berry were the big-name stars for that movie, and again, that was 16 years ago the movie was released, meaning the decisions about those things were made more than 17 years ago, in an era when studios were still uncertain there was money in these comic book-based ventures and there was still a notion that you needed big names stars to bring people in to the movies.
Guardians is pretty damned billable. Maybe Dave Bautista, but I get the feeling Diesel may have done something to get him a role. And even that: they channeled Iron Giant and paid Vin fucking Diesel to say "I am Groot."I recently re-watched those movies (like, last week recent) and while they were break-through blockbusters for the time they don't compare well to the current crop of Marvel movies like Iron Man, Thor, Avengers, and Guardians of the Galaxy where the multi-lead ensembles are written/handled much better and casting choices less “Hollywood”. As I said, things have changed over time. You can really tell the difference between the X-movies, where Fox Studios has major control and the executives (mostly older white men) meddle and the MCU where Marvel calls more of the shots and certain choices are much less traditional Hollywood.
I think their TV stuff is on point, but I also think their Hollywood stuff is stuck with two notions:I'm not pointing to MCU as a paragon of virtue, it's an example of change in the right direction. I'm hoping in 20 years the choices made there look like the choices made 20 years ago.
1. Pay lip service to diversity by recasting minor roles that would only piss off hardcore comic fans (and those guys get mad at anything anyways).
2. Assume the average movie-goer may not be racist.... but is probably pretty racist so only cast "safe" minority actors.
Has Will Smith been allowed to kiss a white woman on screen yet? I remember how stupid (more so than the movie itself) that with all the chemistry between the leads at the end of I, Robot: they should have been making out at the end. They didn't, but Smith got to get all up in Rosario Dawson's personal space in MiB2.Two generations ago the only roles for blacks and minorities were as extras, background, and very, very rarely as a sidekick to a white lead. Now, we do have minorities in, if not leads, at least significant roles other than sidekicks and the occasional lead. This is all part of the progression that needs to occur. If you don't have those secondary minority characters you won't have actors in the pipeline for leading roles. Now, we really do have minority actors capable of being leads that appel across demographics and it's time for them to be considered for roles and for the white-washing to stop.
Pretty sure seeing a black guy kiss a white women is still like seeing a Unicorn. As long as not wanting to offend moronic racists, when TV hasn't minded doing it for years, combined with the prevalence of adding romance sub-plots to every movie idea exists: lead minority roles for men (especially black) are going to remain much rarer than they should be.
Also, somehow white people don't like black men preaching at them according to Hollywood, yet Morgan Freeman has been doing that since I've been alive.