While watching trailer after familiar trailer at the theater earlier this week, one really caught my eye:
Exodus: Gods and Kings. As it played, I began to recognize the well-known actors and actresses who were playing lead roles: Christian Bale, Sigourney Weaver, Joe Edgerton, Ben Kingsley, and more. While all are extraordinarily talented, it puzzled me. Wasn't this film supposed to be set in ancient Egypt? And if so, why are the lead roles being portrayed
not by those of African or Middle Eastern descent, but by those of European descent?
This remained on my mind for quite some time, and, after looking deeper into it, it proved to be even more troubling than what I thought. Not only were white, American/British actors cast to play the
royalty of ancient Egypt (let alone cast at all), but when they chose to include people of color, it was mainly for the roles with the least dignity (such as
theif, slave, assassin, "lower class civilian", and servant).
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Racially-biased casting is even more evident in this powerful image from Exodus. |
Besides being wildly historically inaccurate, this sends a very strong message to the viewers - specifically younger ones. It gives the idea that white supremacy was not only a concept developed in relatively recent world history, but that it has been around for thousands of years, and in places not even inhabited by a white population. It gives the idea that giving white actors/actresses wigs and spray tans is an acceptable way to uphold the integrity of a very well-known story. It gives the idea that getting big (which the film industry often interprets as white) names in the credits is more important than respecting a culture and staying true to that story.
I still cannot believe that despite the progress we've made, films cast such as this one still exist. How could this be acceptable? And if something as powerful and impactful as the film industry can't be counted on to display good standards of racial equality, how can we ever expect racism in the real world to change?