Schlosser85
Civilian
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2007
- Messages
- 0
- Reaction score
- 30,209
- Points
- 0
Get out
Um......no.
Get out
Explain
Great listAdam Driver
Ben Foster
Caleb Landy-Jones
Lakeith Stanfield
Rami Malek
Will Poulter
Kieran’s like three feet tall, right?
Great list
Just saw Malek in the new 007 trailer and it got me back to thinking that he’d be a great Joker
![]()
He made a pretty good jester in MidsommarWill Poulter was supposed to be Pennywise. I’d love to see his Joker.
Can you go deeper on this?Changing the race of probably Gotham's most heinous villain and making him a black man would be a controversial quagmire I doubt the studio would want to stick itself in.
I can imagine the outrage brigade complaining if they “white washed” Lakeith by putting the clown makeup on him. Or if he went in the chemical bath, that the movie was saying that his Blackness had to be washed away and “turned white.”
I can imagine the outrage brigade complaining if they “white washed” Lakeith by putting the clown makeup on him. Or if he went in the chemical bath, that the movie was saying that his Blackness had to be washed away and “turned white.”
The only complaining will be from fanboys who don't want to see a black Joker. "What next, a white Luke Cage?", and other idiotic comments.
I see no reason the Joker can't be black, and I'd be willing to bet that the casting of a black actor would be largely celebrated by the black community. Because the Joker is an iconic role for an actor to tackle, a role of stature in a major Hollywood movie. Preventing black actors from taking such roles because you think it might create a controversy is terribly misguided.
Art is right. Joker is a highly coveted role that many black actors would only dream of having. The outrage would mostly be from the types who think a black Joker is the equivalent to a white T'Challa, not black people/the black community. I certainly wouldn't be offended.Yet another reason why I think the studio would shy away from it. First by race-swapping perhaps Gotham's most evil villain and making him black, then "whitewashing" him with makeup or chemical bleaching, it'd just be stepping into a minefield of potential controversy from multiple directions unnecessarily.
I mean, I'm not dismissing your concerns. I have no doubt that some people would get all uppity over the perceived "optics."Yet another reason why I think the studio would shy away from it. First by race-swapping perhaps Gotham's most evil villain and making him black, then "whitewashing" him with makeup or chemical bleaching, it'd just be stepping into a minefield of potential controversy from multiple directions unnecessarily.
Like it's either that or...I can imagine the outrage brigade complaining if they “white washed” Lakeith by putting the clown makeup on him. Or if he went in the chemical bath, that the movie was saying that his Blackness had to be washed away and “turned white.”