Farerb wrote: ↑May 17th, 2022, 2:38 pm
Just to make it clear, other than Luca and Turning Red, what other films does this apply to?
There could have been a good movie somewhere in "Soul", if one part of it hadn't been abstracted with Picasso doodles, and the other hadn't spent its time rhapsodizing about black jazz in the old neighborhood.
That big missing gray area in the middle, though, was too confusing...Something about bodyswitching with cats?
James wrote: ↑May 17th, 2022, 2:28 pm
In fact, I'd say it's almost racist. Why aren't these more diverse movies as good as what came before? There is no reason a film can't be multicultural and great. So what's happening? Are the people in charge treating these filmmakers differently than they would other filmmakers?
It's a sort-of reverse-racist Supply & Demand. Namely, when Supply starts outstripping demand.
When female or ethnic filmmakers get enough clout to be given a directorial project, their press immediately goes into martyr mode and says "It's an all-white/male industry!...NOT ENOUGH of our stories are being told!"
And aside from the fact that "their stories" routinely seem to be about themselves, that could be one reason a largely commercial industry--one that has millions of dollars and a year's worth of man-hours to seek to find one story that everyone will enjoy on some universal basis--tends to make the financial wisdom of overlooking them for something better, until those filmmakers can think of something outside their own Box.
Until executives who've grown up on the "Silenced" narrative decide "Now is the time!", and start giving, to use your term, "carte blanche" to greenlight story projects just based on Equal Opportunity, and not on the direct basis of whether or not their imaginations actually
have a story to tell.
Just because it's nice, or one has good intentions of doing it, doesn't mean that Pandering isn't still a form of racism/sexism.
And an overabundance of Supply does not equal Demand.