Joseph DeMartino
Moderator
Re: New \'Batman\' villian named
As usual, Andrew gets it 100% wrong when discussing America. Hollywood has bent over backwards not to portray Middle Eaterners as terrorists since 9/11 - even going so far as to turn the villains in Tom Clancy's novel The Sum of All Fears into some kind of half-assed neo-Nazis. And Americans don't "hate" Middle Easterns who aren't trying to murder us. In fact, we don't collectively "hate" much of anybody. It really isn't a national characteristic of ours to invest the much emotion in people when it is easier just to ignore them. You don't really find strong antipathies for other countries here the way you do between, say, Britain and France, France and Germany, Poland and Russia. (Yes, we like to mock the French, and we get ticked off when they betray us and the rest of Western Civilization - which they've been doing about every five years since around 900 A.D. - but we always forgive them .)
You do find the opposite - most Americans I know are at least a bit Anglophilic, memories of WWII, shared language and culture and all that. A significant number are perversely Francophile.
If there has been some kind of English actors-as-bad-guys cliche (and I think you have to exempt the Bond and X-Men films here, since one or more good guys is also English so that isn't so unexpected) you can probably trace it back to Star Wars. Shooting in England with a mostly English cast apart from his leads - and most parts other than the leads being bad guys - Lucas decided to keep the bad guys English and make the good guys American. (Usually by over-dubbing their lines.) With the massive exceptions of Darth Vader (American) and Obi-Wan Kenobi (English) Other filmmakers may have subconciously followed Lucas's example in their quite concious attempts to duplicate his success.
Regards,
Joe
Answer 9/11. The US public now has a group that they hate and who looks different.
As usual, Andrew gets it 100% wrong when discussing America. Hollywood has bent over backwards not to portray Middle Eaterners as terrorists since 9/11 - even going so far as to turn the villains in Tom Clancy's novel The Sum of All Fears into some kind of half-assed neo-Nazis. And Americans don't "hate" Middle Easterns who aren't trying to murder us. In fact, we don't collectively "hate" much of anybody. It really isn't a national characteristic of ours to invest the much emotion in people when it is easier just to ignore them. You don't really find strong antipathies for other countries here the way you do between, say, Britain and France, France and Germany, Poland and Russia. (Yes, we like to mock the French, and we get ticked off when they betray us and the rest of Western Civilization - which they've been doing about every five years since around 900 A.D. - but we always forgive them .)
You do find the opposite - most Americans I know are at least a bit Anglophilic, memories of WWII, shared language and culture and all that. A significant number are perversely Francophile.
If there has been some kind of English actors-as-bad-guys cliche (and I think you have to exempt the Bond and X-Men films here, since one or more good guys is also English so that isn't so unexpected) you can probably trace it back to Star Wars. Shooting in England with a mostly English cast apart from his leads - and most parts other than the leads being bad guys - Lucas decided to keep the bad guys English and make the good guys American. (Usually by over-dubbing their lines.) With the massive exceptions of Darth Vader (American) and Obi-Wan Kenobi (English) Other filmmakers may have subconciously followed Lucas's example in their quite concious attempts to duplicate his success.
Regards,
Joe