
I've been loosely following the whole kerfuffle surrounding the casting
of M. Night Shyamalan's live-action adaptation of Avatar:
The Last Airbender (renamed The Last Airbender,
presumably to avoid confusion with James Cameron's
Avatar project), wherein the lead characters of the
Asian-influenced animated television series have magically become white
people in the live-action version. Avatar is one of my own kids' favorite
shows, and I happen to like it quite a lot myself -- it's one of the
smarter shows aimed at kids, well-researched and thoughtfully created
(by, I should fairly note, a
couple of white guys, Michael DiMartino and Bryan Konietzko) with
an interesting and complex Asian and Inuit mythology woven through it.
And controversy has been brewing online among Asian-Americans and hard-core
fans of the series over the "white-washing" of the Asian-based lead
characters for the adaptation by casting them with white talent.
Avatar: The Last Airbender, the television series,
is heavily Asian-themed. For those who aren't into Avatar, here's a
quick rundown of the basic story: In the Avatar world, civilization
is divided into four separate groups: Earth, Water, Air and Fire, with
each nation's social structure built around its dominant element. Each
nation has "benders" who can manipulate their tribe element martial-arts
style, and then there is one Avatar each generation who has the ability
to bend all four elements, but who has to learn to bend the elements
that are not his by birthright (with the element opposite the Avatar's
birthright being the most challenging to learn). There are a lot of
Eastern spiritual elements (particulary Hindu) interwoven into the story,
including the ability of the Avatar to call on the knowledge of all
past Avatars, which resides within him, the opening of chakras, and
concepts around reincarnation (really, come to think of it, I'm surprised
the religious right hasn't been all over this show for its "non-Christian"
elements).
The controversy over the casting stems from the decision to cast the
four lead roles with white actors. Newcomer Noah Ringer
(supposedly a young karate champ from Texas) plays Aang, the "last
Avatar", Nicola Peltz (Deck the Halls)
plays Katara, a young Water Bender, Twilight's Jackson
Rathbone plays Sokka, Katara's brother (interesting choice),
and pop singer Jesse McCartney was tapped to play Zuko,
the villain (er, what?). McCartney has since dropped out (good news,
that was a horrible casting choice) and been replaced by Slumdog
Millionaire's Dev Patel -- smart on the one
hand, since he's at least Indian, but as hard-core Avatar fans have
noted, the mythology of the Fire Nation is more Chinese in origin than
Indian, which makes Patel the wrong kind of Asian for the part.
There was a similar controversy surrounding the casting of white American
Justin Chatwin
to play the lead part of Goku in Dragonball Evolution,
which opened earlier this month, and last year blackjack drama 21
stirred accusations of white-washing for its casting of white
talent Jim Sturgess and Kate Bosworth
in roles that in real-life were played by Asian-American males. The
Last Airbender is the most recent example, but racial white-washing
has been a part of Hollywood since its beginning. Website Buns
of Yogurt offers a
pretty thorough visual history of the "yellowfacing" of Asian parts
in film, noting Hollywood's long and storied history of casting white
faces in Asian role, from Mary Pickford in Madame
Butterfly way back in 1915, to Mickey Rooney
in Breakfast at Tiffany's (1961) to Bruce Lee
being shut out of playing the character in Kung Fu
that he came up with, in favor of white actor David Carradine.
And it's not just in the casting of white actors in Asian roles that's
a problem; this 2008
article for Asian Week by Philip W. Chung also points to films like
Come See the Paradise (1990), which stuck a story about
a white man in love with a Japanese woman in the middle of a story about
interment of Japanese-Americans during WWII to make it more palatable,
and True Believer (1989), which effectively erased
the contributions of numerous Asian-Americans to the real-life story
of the freeing of a Korean-American jailed for a crime he didn't commit.
And even when Hollywood does cast actual Asians in Asian roles, they
don't always get it right -- as in the controversial decision to cast
Chinese actresses in the three lead roles in Memoirs of
a Geisha, which is set in Japan (oh, those darn Asians, they
all look alike anyhow, who's going to notice, right?)
As for The Last Airbender, bloggers -- some more
well-known than others -- have been talking about the controversy. On
her blog, comedian Margaret Cho
is calling out Shyamalan (who's an Asian-American himself, born
in Indian and raised in the suburbs of Philadelphia) for casting yet
another Asian-themed film with white actors in the lead roles, and Slashfilm
has
also covered quite a bit about the controversy over the casting
calls. On the website angryasianman.com,
the author points readers to racebending.com,
where fans up in arms about the casting of The Last Airbender
can find out how to protest, while digavatar.com
ran a thoughtful piece by Amy Pham for Northwest
Asian Weekly about the Avatar whitewash.
I was talking all this over with an Asian-American friend the other
day who posited that perhaps Hollywood doesn't take the concerns Asian-Americans
raise about the white-washing of Asian roles seriously because Asians
are stereotypically perceived by many white Americans as being submissive,
polite and complacent ("Oh sure, they'll complain on their blogs about
it, but no one reads them anyhow except other Asian-Americans ... they'll
get over if we toss Bai Ling in there somewhere ...
have the screenwriter add an evil, sex-crazed hooker into the story.").
She might have a point.
I've got to side with the folks who are upset about the casting on this
one. This is an adaptation of source material that is completely Asian
in nature, filled with eastern spirituality. What's the rationale for
casting white kids in the lead roles here? I've got nothing personal
against Ringer -- for all I know he's the Next Great Talent -- but what,
they couldn't find three talented Asian kids out of everyone they auditioned
to take the lead heroic roles? There wasn't a single Asian boy who could
both do karate and act in all those casting calls?
It's not as if the
studio can argue that they felt they needed "name" actors, because Ringer
is a complete newcomer, Peltz, while she's done a couple other films,
is certainly not "name" talent yet, and Rathbone is really only known
for Twilight at this point, which presumably has a
different demographic than that for The Last Airbender.
So why all the white faces in the lead roles here? I can only assume
the studio thinks the film will sell better with white actors playing
the leads, but I have to think the series' fanbase, which actually gets
the storyline, would have been just as happy (or happier) with Asian
actors cast in those roles.
When it comes to casting white faces over Asian roles, especially for
an adaptation of a manga or anime series, studios no doubt seek to sell
beyond the demographic of the source material; some number-cruncher
at the studio probably has spreadsheets and a nifty Powerpoint presentation
that prove conclusively to the studio pockets that Asian faces don't
open films or create crossover. But isn't that the same argument Hollywood's
been using since time out of mind in casting white actors to play Asian
parts? Hollywood's a tough business with an eagle eye on the box office
bottom line, and the attitude toward race in casting decisions isn't
likely to change until Asian-Americans band together to show Hollywood
shirts the financial impact their united weight can bear by boycotting
films they feel white-wash Asian parts, and supporting those that do
cast Asian actors in lead roles.
It's 2009, folks. We have an African-American man in the highest elected
office of our country. Can't we have an adaptation of an Asian-themed
series with actual Asian actors playing the lead roles?
-
by Kim Voynar
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