Measuring a drop in a bucket
Jul. 28th, 2009 11:43 amIt's International Blog Against Racism Week again, and boy do we have things to choose from -- at levels of fame ranging all the way from Sonia Sotomayor and Henry Louis Gates, Jr. down to things like the U.S. cover of Justine Larbalestier's Liar. (And quieter things than that, no doubt, from one corner of the world to the other, in every city and town.)
Riffling through my brain to see what I might have something to say about, I landed on, of all things, movies. Specifically, the live-action adaptation of Avatar: The Last Airbender.
Most of my Avatar news has come via
anima_mecanique, who has been posting off and on about the head-desk moves of the filmmakers in whitewashing their source. Avatar, if you don't know, is an animated series set in a fantasy world that I tend to think of as western Pacific Rim in inspiration: the various elementally-themed societies are mostly different varieties of Asian in basis, with the Water Tribes blurring over into northern Pacific natives/Inuit. In other words, not Eurofantasy. But along come the filmmakers with their live-action movie, and suddenly not only is the whole cast white, they're committing cultural blunders right left and center, like telling people to show up for casting calls in their "traditional cultural ethnic attire. If you're Korean, wear a kimono." <headsplode> Well, they backpedaled a little to cast some brown people, like that nice boy from Slumdog Millionaire since everybody likes him, right . . . only last I heard, that nice boy and all the other non-white actors are playing members of the Fire Nation. Who are, y'know, the enemy.
Oh yeah. That fixes everything.
The problem is, I'm not sure what I can do to protest this problem other than make a blog post. Boycotting the movie? Not effective. My one lost ticket sale won't make anybody take notice, and if a lot of people boycotted it, enough that they did notice, Hollywood wouldn't say "oh, I guess we should cast Asian actors next time." They'd say, "oh, I guess we should go back to Eurofantasy." I can buy the animated series, and I'm going to (I've seen the first season and loved it), but after that, it seems like all I can do is talk.
Which isn't totally ineffective. After all, it was fan outcry that got them to cast Dev Patel (even though he would be way better as Sokka than Zuko). And now that I look on the IMDb, it seems they've got a Korean actor for one of the Earthbenders, so hey, there's one who isn't on the wrong side of the war. At least some of that has happened because people talked about the problem.
I just wish I knew how to do more. I'll probably end up going to see the movie, because I suspect that I'll achieve more by supporting baby steps toward non-Eurofantasy than holding out for perfection, but it'll annoy me. Especially since it's pretty obvious that the filmmakers don't even really get where they went wrong.
Riffling through my brain to see what I might have something to say about, I landed on, of all things, movies. Specifically, the live-action adaptation of Avatar: The Last Airbender.
Most of my Avatar news has come via
Oh yeah. That fixes everything.
The problem is, I'm not sure what I can do to protest this problem other than make a blog post. Boycotting the movie? Not effective. My one lost ticket sale won't make anybody take notice, and if a lot of people boycotted it, enough that they did notice, Hollywood wouldn't say "oh, I guess we should cast Asian actors next time." They'd say, "oh, I guess we should go back to Eurofantasy." I can buy the animated series, and I'm going to (I've seen the first season and loved it), but after that, it seems like all I can do is talk.
Which isn't totally ineffective. After all, it was fan outcry that got them to cast Dev Patel (even though he would be way better as Sokka than Zuko). And now that I look on the IMDb, it seems they've got a Korean actor for one of the Earthbenders, so hey, there's one who isn't on the wrong side of the war. At least some of that has happened because people talked about the problem.
I just wish I knew how to do more. I'll probably end up going to see the movie, because I suspect that I'll achieve more by supporting baby steps toward non-Eurofantasy than holding out for perfection, but it'll annoy me. Especially since it's pretty obvious that the filmmakers don't even really get where they went wrong.
no subject
Date: 2009-07-28 08:41 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-07-28 09:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-07-28 09:36 pm (UTC)"Clueless" really sums a lot of it up. Unfortunately.
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Date: 2009-07-29 12:13 am (UTC)But that's the mildest of my huffs with their casting. I'm not boycotting so they'll pay attention. I'm staying away 'cause I think I'd be miserable going.
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Date: 2009-07-29 08:28 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-07-29 01:06 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-07-29 08:47 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-07-29 04:54 am (UTC)No, the real problem here isn't about Euro or non-Euro fantasy. It is about the opportunities available to Asian and Asian-American actors who are already under-represented in Hollywood as it is. And here comes this children's movie, acting like it's the 1930s, basically telling Asian people that they are not even allowed to play actual Asian characters. What is left to Asian actors if they can't even play Asians?
And you are aware they're trying to make sequels, right? That's where your money is going: it's going to prove Paramount right that yes, only white actors are marketable, that yes, we should make more movies with non-Euro dressing but still with white actors in the middle of it all.
There's almost an entire year before The Last Airbender movie comes out. Maybe it's because I'm in too deep with
no subject
Date: 2009-07-29 09:00 am (UTC)But I'm honestly worried that boycotting the movie, even if the reason is well-publicized, may still have counterproductive effects. I'd like to think the studios would see it as a choice between making Asian fantasy with white actors and making Asian fantasy with Asian actors, but I'm afraid they're more likely to read it as a choice between making Asian fantasy at all and making more generic Eurofantasy. Much easier to just import more films from Hong Kong, and in the meantime not worry that their special-effects-laden high-budget project will tank because there aren't any white heroes in it.
None of that is to say I won't support and participate in efforts to make them stop ramming their heads up their own asses every time the issues of culture and race come up. I will absolutely do that. And as you say, there's a year to go; maybe things will improve by then, and maybe they won't. How it goes will determine what decision I make a year from now.
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Date: 2009-07-29 06:52 pm (UTC)As much as I want more Asian fantasy, I want Hollywood to do it right and that means figuring out where the Asians should be in a story that draws so much from their own cultures. Otherwise, yeah, if the lesson Hollywood wants to learn from all this is "we shouldn't do Asian fantasies anymore" instead of "we should stop sticking white actors in Asian fantasies, we should use Asian actors instead," I think I'm going to be ok with that. Because if they can't do it right, if they can't figure out that cultural appropriation at this level is wrong, then they shouldn't be doing it.
As you mentioned, Hong Kong, China, Japan, Korea, India, etc. etc... they have been producing Asian fantasy and will continue producing Asian fantasy. Perhaps we should look there instead of in Hollywood for Asian fantasy.
no subject
Date: 2009-07-30 04:44 am (UTC)