karenhealey hit me with the one-two punch of
link to
this post regarding the casting of white kids as at least three of the four heroes in
Avatar: The Last Airbender, and the
most recent casting of the Fire Nation players.
Anyone who hasn't seen this show ought to give it a chance. For all of the superficial facets pointing to it being your traditional Saturday-morning cartoon, it's incredibly smart, with genuine character-based humor and development, well-animated action sequences, smart plotting, excellent acting (they actually cast kids for the main characters), and a fully-realized world. They specifically plotted this show out for three seasons, and they know how they were going to spend every single half-hour episode. Small details that are mentioned offhand may show up in more significant capacity further down the line, and there are numerous scenes that are out-and-out gorgeous to watch.
spectralbovine does an
incredible job summarizing the awesome that is this show, and it pains me to realize that so many people on my flist (and a few of the people I know in RL) have worn their love of this show on their sleeves and I didn't stop to think about it until mid-last year.
Now, like I said, the "fully-realized world" was an incredibly important part of the atmosphere in
Avatar. It pretty much lives and breathes, and you can see how much work was put into creating it. Each of the different cultures takes its element from a different culture: The Water Tribe is very heavily Inuit-influenced (note their manner of dress and the color of their skin, as well as their villages), the Air Nomads (more or less extinct as of the beginning of the show, hence the sub-title "The Last Airbender") more or less based on Tibetans (their mode of dress), and the Earth Kingdom and the Fire Nation based on different eras of Chinese rule. The inhabitants of this world are more or less Asian.
For the movie, we currently have:
Main characters from "Hero" races (Two from the Water Tribe and an Air Nomad thus far):
White.
Characters from "Villain" race: Iranian, Indian (two thus far), Maori.
I think the best word to summarize all this is "blargh." While I like all the actual actors playing the characters (at least, the Fire Nation characters--I don't really know any of the main characters), I just want to spend my time banging my head against the wall hearing about the casting choices and its basic implications.
Y'know what, though? I don't have to watch this film. I don't know how they're planning on distilling something like
Avatar into a couple of hours, anyway, even if it's apparently planned to be a trilogy. I do highly recommend checking out the TV series when you can, though.