Frustration with an all-white main cast in "Exodus: Gods and Kings"
was voiced earlier this week in the hashtag campaign,
#BoycottExodusMovie.
The Old Testament epic is directed by Ridley
Scott and stars Christian Bale as Moses, Aaron Paul as Joshua, John
Turturro as Seti, Ben Kingsley as Nun and Sigourney Weaver as Tuya.
Earlier this month, Entertainment Weekly released
initial photos of the film release, which Twitter users quickly pointed
out showed that while Moses, Pharaoh and other Egyptian royalty were
played by white actors, black actors were cast as slaves.
This is not the first time that biblical films have been criticized for "whitewashing." In an op-ed for Sojourners last
year, Ryan Herring noted that his initial excitement for "Noah" and
"Exodus" turned to "disdain" after realizing that "not a single one of
the leading roles in either movie was given to a person of Middle
Eastern descent."
"Some things never change. In Hollywood, whitewashing, also known as
racebending, is one of many longstanding tradition...Historically, this
practice was used to discriminate against actors, both male and female,
of color," wrote Herring. "The most common examples of this in the past
were white actors dressing up in what is known as blackface, redface,
and yellowface. While maybe not as controversial or blatant today, the
practice of whitewashing still continues in Hollywood...[where] roles
from scripts that clearly call for a person of color are given to white
actors."
Throughout the history of European imperialism and colonialism this type
of indoctrination was present. Depictions of white only Biblical
figures (including prophets, angels, Jesus, etc.) were intentionally
used to subconsciously indoctrinate the false belief of white divinity
(and therefore superiority) upon the minds of the oppressed and
conquered," he continued. "By allowing Hollywood to hijack Biblical
stories and display them however they please, we as Christians have also
allowed them to be cheapened. We often miss out on cultural aesthetics,
language, motifs, and overall richness when stories are told through
the lens of European ideals and thought patterns."
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