Blaxploitation still a thing? Pass, thanks.
Just make movies please and ditch the whole diversity thing. There is only one human species.
shareJust make movies please and ditch the whole diversity thing. There is only one human species.
shareNot a fan of diversity? Would you mind defining what "Diversity" is or means so we all could decide what to avoid or support accordingly?
shareDiversity is caring about skin color.
share[–] Dengue (102) an hour agoBut what does that have to do with the following?:
Diversity is caring about skin color.
Blaxploitation still a thing? Pass, thanks.Just so that I am clear you are stating that Da 5 Bloods is a Blaxploitation movie, that represents a story or experience about supposedly a different human species based on caring about skin color?
No, all skin colors are the same species. Using black skin for the purpose of selling a movie is blaxploitation. I have no interest in watching a movie like that at the moment when black lives matter is such a hot topic. I rather watch movies where skin color is not an issue.
share[–] Dengue (102) 4 hours agoEnjoy!
Diversity is caring about skin color.
It's really well written and filmed
There's a nice buddy/comedy vibe, some drama, a few scares, tragedy and some action
Overall it's worth checking out and I wouldn't say it's blaxploitation, just a story about a bunch of black buddies that get together for a big adventure years after the war ended
I plan on watching it. I'm a sucker for anything Nam-related, but not the biggest Spike fan tbh.
Thanks for the quick review.
Most welcome
Obviously there are elements of race involved (Spike is all about the topic) but it's really very enjoyable
Delroy Lindo is once again fantastic as a raging tough guy👍
It's not Blaxploitation at all.
This has zero to do with Blaxploitation.
Or is any movie that has Black people starring in it automatically become "Blaxploitation" to you
It's Vietnam War movie that happens to have Black people in it.
There's nothing specifically Black about it
It's made with black people for a specific target audience. That's blaxploitation.
shareOh, so that’s the problem, you just have the wrong impression of what blaxploitation actually is. It’s an exploitation movie featuring prominently black people, but what you’re missing is the exploitation part.
“An exploitation film is a film that attempts to succeed financially by exploiting current trends, niche genres, or lurid content. Exploitation films are generally low-quality ‘B movies’”
This is by no means an exploitation movie, therefore it cannot be a blaxploitation movie.
A few days ago I started to reply to Dengue with a much, much longer version of what you replied. I mean he started with Blaxploitation, then moved over to Diversity, next it was Skin Color, then Black Lives Matter all to finally get to this gem of his personal anthropological awareness or clarity??
[–] Dengue (150) 4 days agoWhich brought me to this little pic:
Because there is only the human race.
Yeah, I suppose. I’m just used to people using quotation marks wrong, haha
share[–] Ant1238 (56) 12 hours agoHmmmm, Punctuation Police? That's a rather tough assignment on boards such as these. I trust your efforts are, "bearing fruit"? 😎 share
Yeah, I suppose. I’m just used to people using quotation marks wrong, haha
I honestly believe there's only one human race. But maybe my definition of exploitation is a bit broad. Like hiring a single black actor to appeal to a broader audience. That's racially motivated exploitation in my book. You won't further bringing down racial injustice until you let go of those motivators. That Norinrad guy assumed I was racist in his first post here and since then he's on the defense for misunderstanding. Something about saving face.
shareYou really don't know what the hell you're talking about. First, "blaxploitation" is a term only used for the black action/drama films of the 1970s. It's no longer used, and guess what? Actor of different colors get hired to appeal to different audiences all the damn time---whatever makes money, plain and simple. Nothing "racist" about that----that's normal Hollywood business, and in every film industry around the world. Which, obviously, you don't have a damn clue about. Also, white people have never been the only people in the world who can tell stories through films, and make them. Just admit that you don't like to watch movies with black people, and move the hell on. Black people and other non-white people have stories to tell, too, and we like to see films that reflects us and our lives, too.
shareYeah, that guy's just a fuckin' moron
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