You gave an example of how an actor's "blackness" could be considered (as defying tradition, as progress, etc) things that you made clear aren't applicable to a white actor.
In the context of an iconic character that has always been played by white actors.
If you want to suggest a similarly iconic character that has always been played by black actors, and how casting a white actor would be defying tradition, feel free. But, as I've said before, given the long history of white actors appropriating black characters and art forms, that'd be hard to do.
But you're welcome to try.
So I gave you a scenario where a white actor's whiteness is given consideration (ticket selling potential) and all I'm asking...really, it's all I'm asking...is if this consideration is acceptable to you?
How could it not be? If the producers hired, say, Tom Hiddleston as Bond, I'd probably see the movie. He might even be great, who knows? (He was good as Loki, I can't deny that.)
Because I do feel it's relevant to your example. If the producers decide that they're going to make more money with a white Bond....is that an acceptable consideration of race to you?
Again, I'd have to accept it, since it's out of my hands.
It'd be a safe decision, which isn't always the best one (witness Star Wars The Force Awakens, and the Star Trek reboots), but one can't fault it. Movies are a business, after all.
That's your right. I'm not sure how the casting of an actor for a role, where race is a factor among many, equates to hiring, say, an accountant, where race has absolutely no relevance whatsoever...but you're free to believe it does. For whatever reason.
Well I suppose that depends on how you define progress.
Fair point. How would casting Tom Hiddleston as Bond move us forward in terms of racial inequality, exactly?
Playing a white character? I'm shocked lol...imagine that?
Nothing about the character requires him to be white. For that matter, Bond's CIA counterpart, Felix, has been played by a black man, and convincingly.
Next thing you know they'll be casting men to play men...women to play women...
I actually went to see a production of Romeo and Juliet once where both Romeo and Juliet were played by women. No change in dialogue at all, but it still gave a different dimension to the play.
For that matter, did you see the rebooted Battlestar Galactica? Did you happen to see who played Starbuck? Have you see the new Sherlock Holmes series on TV, Elementary? Who plays Watson?
Who's getting testy? Again, if this is all just your opinion...and your opinion doesn't matter...
Well you see where I'm going.
Yup.
I'm fine giving my opinion anywhere I can, but there's a limit to what I can opine about. How acceptable a new Bond would be is kind of difficult without knowing who that is. Would Hiddleston be better as Bond than Idris Elba? I don't know. Maybe, maybe not. I'd have to see.
But I'd probably see the movie either way, so I would accept it.
But I can't help but see Elba being a step forward for black actors, taking over such an iconic, high profile role. I feel sure that it would be successful, and it could very well lead future casting directors to spread their nets wider in other casting decisions. Why not a female Doctor, or a black one? Why not an asian superhero next, or a hispanic one?
I can't see how casting Hiddleston would make any difference in how casting directors see race when casting lead roles.
-- A2SG, no matter how good he is as Bond....