I freely admit to having several Mistie moments during that movie. The only 
reason that such a document doesn't exist for me to post is because I haven't 
been able to find a good script to twist. I shall seek it with more diligence.





---------[ Received Mail Content ]----------

 Subject : Re: [RE][scifinoir2] Well, There's Always Reruns of the Cartoon...

 Date : Sun, 18 Jan 2009 19:53:44 -0000

 From : "B. Smith" <daikaij...@yahoo.com>

 To : scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com


I tried to watch The Iceberg's Revenge with my wife once but I totally
lost it when all the blue frozen people show up. It was so damned
funny and bizarre. I'm an insensitive so and so.

--- In scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com, "Martin Baxter"
 wrote:
>
> Keith,
> 
> I can imagine the shame all too well. I did sit through the first
ten minutes of that piece of crap at a family get-together, and had to
walk out on it, with the rest of the family, including my 68-year-old
mother laughing their a$$es off. (Redefinition of "scary moment" for me.)
> 
> I'm proud to say that I'm one of only seventeen people on the planet
who refused to see The Ship That Hit An Iceberg And Sank first-run, or
in any video format available. I finally broke down and took it in
with friends on cable one night. They were all weeping (men and
women). I was wondering how fast I would've been arrested for
disturbing the peace had I paid to see it at a theater, demanding to
get my money back.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
---------[ Received Mail Content ]----------
> 
 Subject : Re: [RE][scifinoir2] Well, There's Always Reruns of the
Cartoon...
> 
 Date : Sun, 18 Jan 2009 16:40:40 +0000
> 
 From : keithbjohn...@...
> 
 To : scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
> 
> 
I wondered that too, but one is forced to ask how somehow like M.
Knight could be bullied into taking such a cast? I know he's lost a
lot of his cachet in recent years, but still, he's not some rube right
off the streets trying to make his first film. This is inexcusable to
me on any level.
> 
> Hate to admit I did watch "Titanic" and enjoyed it well enough,
though it's not one I'd sit through again. As for the Wayans, last
film I saw in which they were involved was "White Chicks", and that
was only because a friend had it running at a Christmas party. It was
stupid, crude, extremely explicit in its sexual jokes, and just
completely not funny. Can you imagine sitting in a room full of
blacks, whites, and Asians, trying to meet people and have small talk
with men and women, and having that running in the background? 
> 
> -------------- Original message ----------------------
> From: "Martin Baxter" 
> > Keith, part of me wants to come to Night's defense and say that
he's had this 
> > casting shoved down his throat by the money men. But I can't see
him taking that 
> > lying down, and he hasn't said a word into any of this that I've
seen. Ergo, 
> > this one is now on the same list as The Movie About The Ship That
Hit An Iceberg 
> > And Sank and any Wayans Bros film, never to be watched in any
medium under any 
> > circumstances.
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > ---------[ Received Mail Content ]----------
> > 
> > Subject : [scifinoir2] Well, There's Always Reruns of the Cartoon...
> > 
> > Date : Sun, 18 Jan 2009 08:06:41 +0000
> > 
> > From : keithbjohn...@...
> > 
> > To : scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
> > 
> > 
> > To follow up Sincere's lead, I found a couple of really
interesting posts on the 
> > casting of all Caucasian actors for the Last Airbender movie. I'm
still a bit 
> > stunned at what M. Knight has done. It's just so insulting. Three
decades since 
> > the silliness of Irish American David Carradine playing a
half-Asian in "Kung 
> > Fu", and H'Wood doesn't see the insult in taking a world full of
nothing but 
> > Asian and Inuit culture, and casting all whites as the leads? 
> > Worse: I'm reading stuff to make me wonder if the entire show will
be people 
> > with Caucasians. I always assumed the movie would be filmed in an
Asian country, 
> > but I'm reading stuff to make me think most of the various
populations will be 
> > Caucasian too. I'm one of the biggest Avatar fans around, but if
this casting 
> > holds, I will not be paying to see the film. I just can't imagine
sitting in a 
> > theatre watching people in modern-day "blackface" eating with
chopsticks, 
> > writing in Chinese characters, calling each other "Fong" or "Wu". 
> > 
> > Here are some pics of the leads --hope they come through--followed
by a few 
> > comments from bloggers. Most interesting to me is how many whites
are upset with 
> > the casting. Seeing a lot of Asians upset, of course, and blacks
as well. 
> > Indeed, this quote from a Brother about the whole affair is one of
the best I've 
> > read: 
> > 
> > "If they�re supposed to be some generic everyrace, then hell,
why not toss in 
> > some black actors, or Latinos? That makes about as much sense.
Zuko�s a bit of 
> > a thug; let�s make him black. Hell, let�s make the whole Fire
Nation black; 
> > Hollywood loves to make us the bad guys."
> > 
> > I'm also seeing that I even I was unaware just how big and
widespread the 
> > following for the series is. 
> > 
> > 
> > Katara, as played by (non-Asian) Nicola Peltz
> > Zuko, as played by (non-Asian) Jesse McCartney
> > Sokka, as played by (non-Asian) Jackson Rathbone
> > 
> > 
> > Noah Turner is Ang
> > 
> > 
> > ***********************************************************
> > http://theangryblackwoman.com/2008/12/10/m-night-say-it-isnt-so/
> > 
> > Nihilunder, on December 10th, 2008 at 9:31 pm Said: 
> > As a white person I feel about as condescended to as you do
marginalized. Why do 
> > the goons in hollywood think white people just won�t see a movie
unless the 
> > cast looks like them? I mean, look at us: we help drive the
imported anime 
> > industry, listen to rap music, and eat up foreign movies on those
rare occasions 
> > when they are offered.
> > Is the message not clear? I can�t help but conclude that they
think I�m 
> > stupid. 
> > �But Nihilunder, what about BET and similar programming that
doesn�t get a 
> > white audience?� If the product is a quality one, we see it;
most visual media 
> > geared toward non-whites is of questionable quality, and THAT�S
why we don�t 
> > spend our money on it. If it�s good, we really don�t much care
if the cast 
> > is all asian, or all black, etc. Honest.
> > I love Avatar as well, and I�m sickened at how the studio is
going to screw 
> > this up. Not that I should be surprised, really; just about every
movie 
> > adaptation of anything ever made has been crap, so why should this
be any 
> > different?
> > Kristen, on December 10th, 2008 at 9:54 pm Said: 
> > I belong to an Avatar community on LJ. We all had mixed feelings
about the 
> > live-action film, but there was a general assumtion that at least
some of the 
> > cast would be Asian, and that Katara &amp; Sokka would wind up
being played by 
> > somebody�anybody�with at least a natural deep tan.
> > When the casting choices were unveiled, you could actually HEAR
the excrement 
> > hitting the fan. There are a LOT of people who are deeply
infuriated by this. 
> > It�s insane. It�s stupid. �There is no Asia in
Avatarverse� I saw one 
> > defender declaim.
> > I suppose. Except for the writing, which is all in Chinese, with
scattered 
> > Korean. And the clothing, which varies from fantastical to
regionally-specific. 
> > And the names, which are mostly meaningful,
derived-from-Asian-languages ones. 
> > And the culture cues, like the background artwork and eating with
chopsticks. 
> > And the OBVIOUSLY DIFFERENT ETHNICITIES OF THE CAST�S FEATURES.
> > FINE. Talent over race. But you can�t tell me that in the
entirety of the 
> > entertainment industry, there aren�t three decent actors who
could at least 
> > vaguely resemble their characters. It�s shameful and ridiculous
and I, a white 
> > girl from southern California who never makes a stand on anything,
am not going 
> > to pay one cent towards this film
> > nojojojo, on December 11th, 2008 at 12:15 am Said: 
> > I�ve seen a lot of people in reaction to this casting declare
that the 
> > characters don�t look Asian to them, and I really have to wonder
what that 
> > means. The character designs, to me, look like Asian people. Not
like the 
> > caricature Asians too often seen in American cartoons � Asians
as defined by 
> > white creators, with eye-shapes grossly overemphasized and skin
tones that evoke 
> > liver failure rather than racial distinctiveness. The characters
of the Avatar 
> > cartoon look like real Asians, who have widely varied skin colors
and varied 
> > hair textures and varied bone structures and varied eye-shapes
(no, they don�t 
> > all have epicanthic folds!). I think the reason a lot of people
consider the 
> > Avatar characters �ambiguous� is because they�re looking for
the 
> > caricatures we�re used to, not the realism that the show
actually depicts.
> > Because it�s so obvious that the characters are meant to be
Asian that I think 
> > anyone who says they aren�t is smoking something. Good grief,
they write in 
> > Chinese characters/Japanese kanji. They use chopsticks and teacups
without 
> > handles. They have names like Mai and Toph Bei Fong. They wear
Korean hanboks 
> > and Chinese scholars� robes and Japanese feudal battle-armor and
Inuit 
> > sealskin. If they�re meant to be white, then why not pepper the
show with the 
> > trappings of European culture instead? If they�re supposed to be
some generic 
> > everyrace, then hell, why not toss in some black actors, or
Latinos? That makes 
> > about as much sense. Zuko�s a bit of a thug; let�s make him
black. Hell, 
> > let�s make the whole Fire Nation black; Hollywood loves to make
us the bad 
> > guys. (I nominate Laurence Fishburne for Zuko�s uncle Iroh.
�Find the 
> > Avatar, nephew, and I�ll show you how deep the rabbit-hole
goes��)
> > Lorena, on December 11th, 2008 at 1:35 pm Said: 
> > I wanted the actors to be very diverse actually. I thought they
had a great 
> > opportunity to have a multiethnic cast and they wasted it. Someone
from LJ 
> > posted this and it echoed my sentiments:
> > �It�s not that hard to get diversity. Earth Kingdom: find
actors from 
> > Lebanon eastward, Mexico down and Native Americans, Fire Nation:
predominately 
> > Japanese and Chinese, Water Tribe: African American, Inuit,
Indian, Bangladesh 
> > and Austrian Aborigines (some have naturally very dark skin and
platinum hair = 
> > Yue), Air Nomads: Raid a Tibetan Buddhist temple - seriously, they
already have 
> > the right clothes in the right colors too�.
> > �.and the fact that M.Night and his crew are willing to put
white kids in 
> > yellowface, brownface and blackface is disgusting, insulting and 
> > disheartening.�
> > My grandmother is Egyptian and she always complained that she had
to watch 
> > generations of movies where our Queens and Pharaohs (especially
our black 
> > pharaohs!) were portrayed by white actors�.*sigh* and here I
thought my 
> > children, and other minority children, wouldn�t have to endure
similar things.
> > 
> > 
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQdwk8Yntds
> 
> 
> 
> 
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQdwk8Yntds
>





http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQdwk8Yntds

Reply via email to