- Joined
- Nov 30, 2013
i hope george takei will be in it
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i hope george takei will be in it
In this case it's pretty obvious the diversity is being pushed for ideological reasons, with white men being curiously absent from the heroine's team. It's a very apparent thing after that writer or whoever it was posting a exceptional rant on Twitter about the Empire being white nationalists.
Well shit I forgot about this. it's still a better fandom though.
i hope he will be in it and have a 45 minute wrinkly old man gay buttsex scene like the ones on Game of Thrones because representation is important
Under normal circumstances it doesn't matter if a movie has a female lead. Even in Star Wars the Expanded Universe stories have had a lot of them, the most prominent one that I know of being the daughter of Han Solo, Jaina.
In this case it's pretty obvious the diversity is being pushed for ideological reasons, with white men being curiously absent from the heroine's team. It's a very apparent thing after that writer or whoever it was posting a exceptional rant on Twitter about the Empire being white nationalists.
So yeah, having political agendas forced into movies about space battles detracts from the enjoyment.
The funny thing is that the one writer isn't completely wrong: Lucas originally based the whole concept of the Empire off of Nazi Germany, right down to the dress uniforms for the Admirals and Generals. Which, no matter which side of the fence you're on, makes the "hero worship" of Darth Vader and the Empire as a whole by SW fanboys kind of disturbing, IMHO. TFA took it to an extreme "on the nose" level with General Hux's speech before they blew up Hosin Prime. If that didn't solidify the CS Lewis-esque allegory, well, I don't know what to tell you.
Not to mention that''s what makes the whole concept of the 501st (a cosplay group focused around Imperial and Sith characters that goes around and does charity work) kind of unsettling when you really think about it, too. I mean sure, they're doing some great work and have raised thousands upon thousands of dollars for charitable organizations and children's hospitals (largely because the founder's daughter died from brain cancer a few years back. If you've seen a pink R2 unit here and there, that was inspired by her), but it's sometimes hard to reconcile the fact they're dressed up as characters from a faction that's inspired by the Axis Powers from WWII. I think they've acknowledged this as such, but I can't be assed to find what the "official" statement is.
There is a world of difference between "I really love this fictional character (inspired by the Axis Powers)" and "I idolize Nazis." People love to pretend to be villains. It's all about power fantasies. It's perfectly natural and human, and not unsettling or harmful at all. Darth Vader is cool. The other problem with that thinking is that you could draw that line for anyone who liked the portrayal of a villain in any fiction ever, and at that point you also get into debates like "what makes a nazi-based villain group worse than a single likable murderer? Is the murder of one million innocent people really any more disturbing the murder of one innocent person?" And so on. Fiction is fiction. It should never be equated in that way with reality.
TLDR: It's problematic (TM) that people compared the bad guy groups in Star Wars to white supremacists.
Meanwhile, the Empire of the original trilogy was based on the Nazis. The imperial officers even wore surplus Wehrmacht uniforms. Also "Stormtroopers"
And The First Order of the sequel trilogy has imagery & uniforms based on the SS. Abrams even said that the FO were based off Nazi remnants who fled Europe.
/sperging
Come to think of it, I've seen very few actual/long-time Star Wars fans crowing about Rey and Jin (much less Finn, Poe, and the majority of the Rogue One cast) as it's largely been casuals/the Breitbart audience/poltards doing the endless belching of complaints into the void about them.
It goes both ways.Because only exceptional people care about the gender of the characters.
It goes both ways.
I don't give a shit what gender or race Rey was, my issue with her was that she was perfect and infallible, being trusted and having all those skills out of nowhere. But of course pointing that out makes you sexist in some circles because she's a woman.
It's something that way too many people are taking way too seriously.What's Star Wars?
I don't get why suddenly women in Star Wars is such a big deal. I mean, people have already mentioned there's been plenty of prominent women in SW, so I still don't understand why this is such a big to-do. I mean ffs, when people complained about Ahsoka initially, it was mostly because she was obnoxious and irritating, not just because she was a girl.
Come to think of it, I've seen very few actual/long-time Star Wars fans crowing about Rey and Jin (much less Finn, Poe, and the majority of the Rogue One cast) as it's largely been casuals/the Breitbart audience/poltards doing the endless belching of complaints into the void about them. If Star Wars fans really did get their manpants in a knot about female lead characters, then Ahsoka wouldn't have gotten as popular as she did, to say nothing of Mara Jade, ffs.
I would agree on that front. I thought TFA was very well acted and the writing was solid but it did get a little ridiculous how she accumulated all of these abilities, as though she was going through Luke's story arc in three hours rather than three films. Still, I'm willing to give the rest of this trilogy and Rogue One a chance.
I think this kinda affects every media out there, tbh. Maybe i'm just talking out of the nostalgia goggles, but back in the day of the 90s/2000s people honestly weren't this obsessed/upset about women and minorities in movies. I mean, we had films with them but nobody was complaining, or at least being this conscious about it. is this a result of the Internet's push for justice?
TLDR: It's problematic (TM) that people compared the bad guy groups in Star Wars to white supremacists.
Meanwhile, the Empire of the original trilogy was based on the Nazis. The imperial officers even wore surplus Wehrmacht uniforms. Also "Stormtroopers"
And The First Order of the sequel trilogy has imagery & uniforms based on the SS. Abrams even said that the FO were based off Nazi remnants who fled Europe.
/sperging
Nah, it's a result of kikes going absolutely OTT with "minorities" (faggots and Googles) using White created studios in White countries.
Britain isn't a white country, you Paki.
I don't recall any specific mentions of it in the original trilogy, but I don't think there were any non-humans seen on the Death Star or Star Destroyers in any of the films (with the exception of the bounty hunters in episode 5). The only mention I know of from the Expanded Universe occurred in Survivor's Quest when it was revealed that the 501st had a non-human member which came as quite a surprise to Mara Jade.I don't remember if it was ever brought up in the original trilogy but in the expanded universe it's mentioned that the empire didn't give two fucks what color you were, they were an anti alien/pro human organization like Cerberus from Mass Effect. Hell the prototype for the clone/storm troopers was Jango Fett who wasn't white.