Diversity Casting & the LOTR movies

Christopher Tolkien is very picky. No matter what you do he’ll find fault.

Well, sure, there are indications that in Shakespeare’s time there were a few people of recent African descent (that is, “black”) in London, but if you picked any random Londoner out of a crowd the odds would be extremely high that that person would be white rather than white.

So no, Tolkien’s characters are not necessarily white, but whiteness would seem to be of a high likelihood.

What I said was that I would not personally look forward to seeing LOTR redone with Disney-style token representation of a numerous racial groups. That’s my opinion. I don’t see anything wrong with that type of casting, I don’t try to prevent it from happening, I don’t engage in trolling of the actors involved, all I do is fail to be enthusiastic. And that’s not saying much, because I’m not enthusiastic about the enormous majority of movies or pop culture regardless of the race of the people involved. But if Disney or any other studio decides to “reboot” LOTR with a multi-racial cast and there’s a large audience that wants that sort of thing and it becomes a hit, that’s fine with me. That would be capitalism in action.

I am opposed to attacks on anyone, solely because they were cast in a certain role and the attackers think they were the wrong race. Which happens frequently, of course. My statement about LOTR is a personal aesthetic view, which I have no right or expectation that anyone else will hold. But those who attack white actresses for starring in non-white roles are attacking people and implying that something morally wrong was done.

Lol, last night my daughter found a black person in ROTK:

As an aside, someone asked about the possibility of interbreeding between (say) humans and halflings. One of Tolkien’s letters takes the view that hobbits were, fundamentally, a branch of humanity (part of Illuvatar’s final theme, able to transcend the Music, leave the World for parts unknown when they die, etc.). This would actually make hobbits and humans more closely related than either is to elves or dwarves, or than any of them is to the maia, and we know that it’s possible (though rare) for humans and elves to interbreed, as well as elves and maia. So yes, there may well have been a few three-quarters-lings running around in Bree, or other places where they mingled.

Tolkien also wrote that one swig of the appropriate magic booze can turn a human into an elf, and that some (half-?)elves can choose to be mortal just by thinking about it, so if there is any difference between man and elf, it seems to be purely mystical; they are biologically identical.

No one gonna mention how Arwen was elevated for the sake of diversity…? Romance story too.

LOTR was superbly cast. You start casting for diversity sake and you run into landmines. How about we make Sam…from India? Ohhhh now we just made the “manservant” a POC. We’ve already heard how it was distasteful to make the bad guys POC.

So who are we talking about here??? Cause almost all the roles were perfectly cast. And some of the lesser roles you might recast are related to the perfectly cast ones.

Lol…theres actually tons of POC in the show. Mostly as bad guys, stunt men, long shot doubles.

Where did he ever write of magic booze turning a human into an elf?

And Luthien was a really special case. Her becoming counted among the ranks of humans was not merely magical, but miraculous.

I believe it is this drink mentioned in The Book of Lost Tales:

though from that passage it is not clear what this drink exactly does besides give the gifts of skaldicity, youth/health, and immortality.

OK, but OTOH the handy Wikipedia list of Half-Elves lists at least Elros and Arwen as also somehow choosing to be mortal.

Well, except since this thread started, we now know a bit more about European prehistory and how it relates to skin tone…

That passage is quite clear that the limpe does not turn a human into an elf, even if it gives immortality and an Elvish appreciation of beauty.

And the half-elves, remember, are also half-human. That’s not one race choosing to be the other; that’s someone of ambiguous status choosing to resolve the ambiguity.

Should I be offended that all the orcs spoke Kiwi English?

Hey, min. I’m Uglúk. This is Grishnákh. We’re gonna dine on manflesh. Wanna come?

That was hilarious. I could absolutely hear the accent in my hid. or i should say, “I culd hear the accent…in my hid?”

Not Orcs, but: Bad Taste - Wikipedia

(btw Tolkien described at least some orcs as “swarthy” and having bad teeth; darkness, shadows, and the absence of light are associated to Evil in his stories)

Reference:

That’s Taika Watiti