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#32561 |
Blu-ray Champion
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TBH, I think a lot of the allure about SOTS would disappear if Disney were to release it in a limited release or hand it off to Criterion. A lot of the allure is that it is the forbidden fruit you can't see. I watched it a few years ago and besides the animated numbers and James Baskett's performance I didn't find anything special about the film.
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Thanks given by: | Majin Blu (04-21-2020) |
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#32562 | |
Blu-ray Baron
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Of course, with the real MI5 and MI6's notorious failure to recruit BAME agents even now (their few BAME employees are almost exclusively low level), if they ever did cast a black actor as Bond that would probably double the numbers overnight... Back to Genghis Khan, I think the issue with the casting there is that it's such a grab bag of nationalities with no attempt to create coherence (Omar Sharif, Telly Savalas, Woody Strode, Francoise Dorleac and Michael Hordern all playing Mongols). By contrast, while it's not a racial issue, William Wyler made a conscious decision to cast Brits as Romans and (for the most part) Americans as Jews in Ben-Hur so there would be some consistency rather than a noticeable cash of accents. |
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Thanks given by: | nitin (04-22-2020) |
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#32563 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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![]() I guess we’ve gotten pretty far afield of this thread’s topic, so I’ll stop now. But I do have to say that Aclea’s line “the patron saint of British dodderiness Michael Hordern“ may be the funniest thing he’s ever written. |
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#32564 |
Blu-ray Prince
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Exactly, but I would also suggest the removal of Confederate statues, statues and pictures of certain Canadian prime ministers and banning a certain version of "Money for Nothing" by Dire Straits from the airwaves has also improved everyone's life. What a wonderful time to be alive and change history! I truly can't believe we haven't seen more films disappear.
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Thanks given by: | Rzzzz (04-21-2020) |
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#32565 | |
Banned
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I would also be perfectly fine with a black James Bond, as long as he has a British accent..... |
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#32566 | |
Senior Member
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Back to contemporary times two of the worst put on accents on celluloid , Natashia McElhone and Johnathan Pryce playing the IRA duo in Ronin. Plenty of decent Irish actors out there. |
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Thanks given by: | Rzzzz (04-21-2020) |
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#32567 | |
Banned
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Thanks given by: | Professor Echo (04-21-2020), RalphoR (04-21-2020) |
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#32568 | ||
Blu-ray Ninja
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Thanks given by: | Blu_Beard (04-25-2020), ShellBeacher (04-21-2020) |
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#32569 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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A "male Miss Marple". That's an interesting question. The Marple stories are pretty much the progenitor of what's referred to as "cozy mysteries", which almost to a one have female protagonists. I broached this question to my wife, who is a "cozy" fan, and she said that the only issue that makes it questionable about having a John Marple instead of a Jane Marple is that in the context of the times in which the stories take place, a elderly woman would be considered "non-threatening", and therefore she'd be able to insinuate herself into situations that a man would not. But, my wife proffered two examples of male characters of her type: Dorothy Sayers's Lord Peter Wimsey and C.K. Chesterton's Father Brown. Bottom line: I wouldn't have a problem with a "John" Marple, as a bachelor amateur detective nosing about the 1920s English countryside. I don't think it violates the essence of the character like a "black Charlie Chan" would. A trans Sherlock Holmes. Given that Holmes was, for the most part, an asexual character, I don't see a trans Holmes as a problem. There's nothing inherent in Holmes's character or his abilities or his quirks that preclude the character being a trans male. Or a trans female. Or a cisgender woman. RCR already brought up Lucy Liu's Joan Watson. And once again, context is key, because Elementary was set in 21st Century New York. That would not fly if the series was set in the late 19th Century. It also depends on what you mean when you talk about honoring the "original conception of a character". The original conception of Nick Fury was a white, cigar-chomping US Army sergeant in World War II. Virtually concurrently with the comic featuring his combat adventures during The Big One, a "present day" Nick Fury was featured in various Marvel comics as the director of the spy organization S.H.I.E.L.D. In the 00s, an alternate universe version of him was black, and in fact, his looks were based on Samuel L. Jackson's (with both his enthusiasm and permission). And that's why Jackson was cast as Fury in the Marvel movies. And most fans think he's great in the role. But, technically speaking, with the exception of his S.H.I.E.L.D. directorship, he has nothing in common with the "original conception of a character". But the real point is that, in the end, it's all "artistic license". Shakespeare has been twisted and bent, raveled and unraveled in many different ways. Romeo and Juliet became West Side Story, Macbeth became Throne of Blood, The Tempest became Forbidden Planet. In Richard Loncraine's Richard III, the story was transposed into an alternate universe vision of a fascist Britain. Some people love this kind of thing; other people hate it. So is that honoring the original concept or dishonoring it? Depends on who you ask. Me, I think it's honoring the original by making the characters and stories more universal. |
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Thanks given by: | Dollar Colonel (04-21-2020), octobercountry (04-22-2020), RCRochester (04-21-2020), thebalconyfool (04-26-2020) |
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#32570 | ||
Blu-ray Champion
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#32571 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#32572 |
Blu-ray Knight
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You make very good points and I enjoyed reading them, but we have to agree to disagree about it being apples and oranges. I'm just not seeing the difference unless one starts flirting with double standards. It would be just as easy to update Charlie Chan into the 21st century and apply color blind casting as some think should be done with Bond. Yes, on the surface it seems impossible, because we are ingrained now to think no one can play an Asian but an Asian, but in a way that's just as restrictive as saying no one can play Bond but a Caucasian. That's what I meant before about all of this being a slippery slope. Why is one right and another not right? Both are tampering with the original concepts. In any case, this won't be resolved here and certainly not in the world, so while it makes for good conversation, I can't think of much else to add to it at the moment.
Although we may disagree on some of these theories, ideas and proposals, one thing I would expect most of us here can stand united over is that old movies, like the allegedly racist Chan films and sexist Bond films should never be buried out of some current ideal of new enlightenment. This kind of head in the sand censorship has no place in any period of history. Which brings us back to where this all started, Twilight Time's Blu of GENGHIS KHAN. The one time I watched it on DVD, I was more bored with the direction of the film rather than outraged by the inappropriate casting, but I do love epics and at some point I can see giving it another chance. |
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Thanks given by: | jayembee (04-22-2020) |
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#32573 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
Nov 2014
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Last edited by SeanJoyce; 04-21-2020 at 11:54 PM. |
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#32574 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I do want to say, in this particular case: why criticize system and actors that went along with it? I was 60 years ago. What is the point? You're not really going to accomplish anything as it's too much in the past. It would make more sense to question or criticize more recent examples because the movie world in the USA until the end of the 60s (at least) was a bubble. And sure you could say, they had a Chinese character in the movie but no famous Chinese actor that fit the bill they wanted because Hollywood and society at large did not allow other races to rise to the same level of fame and English acting skills as caucasians (and so on) but you just need to accept that that's how it was back then. Things have changed a bit now, so maybe i makes more sense to focus on the recent. That said, I don't like Scarlet Johansson at all, nor am I familiar with that movie she played mention a page earlier, but if the situation was that the movie got made because she wanted to play the role and had the right cards, or it was in her hands, why should she not be allowed to play it? Is it better to make the movie with her and be it a big success because she's a famous actress and celebrity (and it appears a good actress - I'm going by fame here) or is it better if it got made with an actress of the same ethnicity/race that very few people know and would go and see and remain a small indie movie? |
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Thanks given by: | Dollar Colonel (04-21-2020) |
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#32575 |
Blu-ray Baron
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For fans of TT's release of The Big Fix, Varese Sarabande released Bill Conti's memorable score for the first time in a limited edition of 1500 copies:
https://www.varesesarabande.com/prod...deluxe-edition ![]() |
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Thanks given by: | oildude (04-27-2020) |
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#32580 |
Expert Member
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Well said. I oppose destruction of anything historical and am 100% against censorship of any kind. I'm also open to a black James Bond though it has to be done right.
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