regwec
Make Mine Marble
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That's not what I'm not saying at all, lol.
It may not be what you intend to say, but it is what you are inferring. The sum of the various rehearsals of your argument seems to be that skin tone is the single factor which can blow all other considerations out of the water. To me, that's just absurd. I am struggling hard not to use the 'r' word; suffice to say that I firmly believe that black actor x can have much more in common with 'white' character y than does white actor z.
Let me ask you, would you rather have Denzel play the part, or Tim Booth?
So you'd be okay with a green and purple suited Superman? As his main costume, not some alternate suit. Because he's usually inked red and blue.
Same thing.
No, it isn't. Human beings are more than just colours. With an actor, regardless of whether they are black or white, you get a human being with a lifetime of experience and emotional depth, an artist's skill and craftsmanship, and a personality replete with countless little nuances all contributing to their overall presence. The shade of their skin is a tiny, tiny, part of the package.
With a piece of red fabric you get a piece of red fabric. With a piece of purple fabric you get a piece of purple fabric.
You seem to be viewing people as mere physical objects with, furthermore, their skin colour as the most outstanding element of their identity. I suppose I just find that deeply immature.
Generally yes and you can see that in the Byrne version of the character who is middle aged, overweight and naturally BALDING, but in terms of high tech industries and the ruthless inventor/magnate hybrid that even more recent depictions of Lex seem to draw from, younger white males are probably just as iconic. Eg. Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, and their ilk.
Personally, I'm also a little uncomfortable with casting a minority actor as Lex because it may have unintended racial undertones (if they go with the slum upbringing backstory) and the character becomes another stereotypical minority gangster/thug if not written correctly. Minorities still have a hard enough time breaking into the highest reaches of corporate America and are still heavily underrepresented there, I don't know if it is a good idea to portray one of them as part of the worst excesses of that world when Hollywood is still greatly lacking in positive depictions of successful minority characters. But that is whole another can of worms.
Now, this argument I can buy. If a character's ethnic background contains a crucial cultural connotation (i.e. it has a bearing on their character or symbolism) then, no, it shouldn't be changed. For this reason, as I have said, Clark Kent, Bruce Wayne and James Bond probably have to be white. (I am surprised to be see someone with such a dogmatic racially purist outlook be so laissez faire about changes to James Bond, who is perhaps the most culturally specific character in genre fiction). For Lex...I don't see it myself. His background is not hugely important on the whole, and I certainly don't think it is culturally specific.
You argument is at least cogent and logical, however.