What is 'faithful representation of characters', when historically not only is diverse casting complained about for new characters, but it's also complained about for new interpretations of characters? Art is a living process. It changes with time and grows and is always at its best when it is flexible. When I was a girl I was raised on depictions of Peter Pan where the boy was played by a cis woman. Not girl. Woman. Historically, roles have been portrayed by diverse actors that don't fit the 'canon' depictions of those characters. And you know what? Nobody got hurt.Mireya wrote: Tue Jan 09, 2024 11:48 pm We are not arguing that diversity is a bad thing at all which is a misrepresentation from the way you guys face force diversity. We are saying that adding character for the sake of pleasing the audience and keep it diverse in stories with established targeted ethnicity and country done in is far from being as sensible as you think it is, because we are in for faithful representation of characters and for freedom of the writer to choose who he wants to portray in his series, not feel limited by needing to represent what he didn't intend to do.
Hell, I remember reading Amazing Grace by Mary Hoffman when I was in elementary school, and everyday I am thankful for that because it normalized something that I think is very important and something that I think is very important for us to carry into adulthood as mature people that should be capable of being even more flexible than children (the kids are beating our asses in the QRTs, y'all): art is about humans. Art is about fun. About is about love and life and all the myriad of things that make up those things.
What art is not is a competition. Art is there to speak something to a human being, and something that means Superman is a bisexual guy with a Japanese boyfriend with pink hair. Sometimes it means Arial is played by a black woman, because who the fuck cares, a black kid somewhere is going to love it and I'm way more invested in making a black kid happy or be inspired to grow up and become some kind of performing artist.
Stories and characters are there to be interpreted and remolded by humans. The arts are art, not math or science or some unchanging law of the universe or what the fuck ever.
There's also no such thing as 'freedom of the writer', especially not in a commercial setting. Torishima and Kondou Yuu were always pushing Toriyama to do the shit they wanted, none of it just so happened to be good shit like "Blooma isn't sexually assaulted again and has a marked contribution to the plot beyond nearly getting raped by two Red Ribbon Army soldiers" or shit like that.
As a writer myself I'm well aware that the things that we writers create can have a negative influence on an audience. I grew up seeing film, television, video games and books that influenced me and people like me to have negative views of themselves, and I am empathetic enough as a grown woman now to know that it actually sucks to get drawn into something you love, and then unceremoniously get smacked in the fucking face with something that says "You're a freak" or "You can only be this or that." It fucking sucks, and I would expect any adult capable of socializing with other adults to understand that and to think about the sort of art that they create and promote.
Sir, we are literally marginalized in our daily lives for being anything other than cisgender and heterosexual. As a trans woman my existence is literally being debated in legislatures across my country right now. There are entire large swathes of the nation that I cannot visit without being either hatecrimed or arrested for taking a shit in the women's restroom.Mireya wrote: Tue Jan 09, 2024 11:48 pmI also don't see why people of different sexual orientation for instance would be offended by the lack of it in a series, when it isn't ignoring their existence, choosing what to depict is totally at the creators discretion and as long as they don't demean any group in specific, freedom of casting and writing character they better seen fit is what should be encouraged because we want a coherent story,not a story that is done solely for people feeling well represented when those corporations (funny coming from ppl who bash capitalism) profits over it and think inclusion is a way to appease ppl and go with the tide when they're as capitalists as they come. Funny how insults are allowed as long as one side does it.
Hell, as a bisexual woman I'm out of place among all monosexuals (heterosexual and homosexual), and have to rely on monosexual allies who have educated to feel comfortable even discussing the sort of issues that I face both internally and externally.
You say that you don't "see why people of different sexual orientations would be offended by the lack of our existence in a series" and I'm just a little stumped as to why you think being normalized in our pop culture isn't important to us. For one, pop culture art is going to depict us one way or the other, but even if it didn't, not depicting a part of life in the real world is insanity. Women like me have been portrayed in media for decades, and it's only in just the last few years that our existence wasn't used to call us freaks, serial killers, rapists, or men-in-dresses. It's only within the last eight years that we've started being more than "Dead Prostitude #3" in American television.
Hell, even Japanese animation is still very slowly catching up. Queer, non-binary and trans characters have only recently been receiving sympathetic portrayals in more modern anime (Oshiai no Sora, Zombie Land Saga, I'm In Love With the Villainess). These are anime aimed at adults, too. PreCure has been slowly and stealthily fighting the fight for queer representation for decades at this point, too.
Art—even commercial art—is made for an audience. It's made to tell an audience something. Furthermore, these works of art are not made by some singular writer. Even Dragon Ball as a comic was created by a team of people, both through the production of the comic itself, its editing, and it's publishing. The idea that proper diverse representation would somehow be violating some sacred part of the process of creating art is ludicrous. Toriyama isn't scribbling shit on a napkin that you're reading, he's creating stories and comics through a large-scale publishing firm intent first-and-foremost on making money. It just so happens that JUMP and Shueisha are run by a bunch of rich guys who buy into weird shit about what is and isn't appropriate for their comic aimed at kids.
Current generation? The same old white men are the same people that have been greenlighting and making films for a century. That they might be hiring more diverse actors to perform in their films isn't on those actors or that diversity—it's on the fact that capitalism's desire to create profit for those old white men greenlighting these films are made-by-committee. You're absolutely not talking about indie films made on a shroestring budget and outside of the typical studio system.FireFly wrote: Tue Jan 09, 2024 11:40 pm That's something I can't say for most of the current generation's attempts at female inclusivity because almost all the diversity-conscious movies suck and make the concept of female and POC representation look worse than it has to. Just look at Terminator: Dark Fate. Shitty movie, and it failed to make the new female protagonist anything close to a good replacement for John Connor; consequently the movie bombed in theaters.
If it was done well, there wouldn't be such widespread criticism of it. And it's not like the current generation is the first one to try and be racially diverse. I just think the way they do it sucks.
Also, replacing John Connor? When the hell was John ever the actual protagonist of the two films everyone thinks is good (the first two)? Linda Hamilton's Sarah Connor is the star of those films. She's the hero. Even with how the second film capitalizes on the popularity of Arnold Schwarzenegger doesn't negate that what audiences are emotionally invested in is Hamilton's arc and performance.
Again: criticizing the diversity isn't going to get you better films. You're focusing on the completely wrong issue to throw diverse actors and the audiences that they inspire under the bus.
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I try to make a habit of getting away from a lot of mainstream fictional media these days—mostly because I'm looking for shit that's actually emotionally true and relatable and Hollywood productions are really getting away from that in this the past twenty years to chase after action blockbuster money—and I've found that indie productions are definitely kicking ass right now. Monica (2022) is really good, and it's a film entirely about how diversity is ostracized and becomes the center of actual relatable family drama.