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Replying to @ActuallyNPH @nytimes
Here's the problem in simple terms: the racist cop gets redeemed, but his redemption has absolutely nothing to do with black people or atoning for his crimes against black people.
3 replies 2 retweets 113 likes -
This tells me the film isn't invested in black people beyond as a way to signal that a white character is Bad. In 2018, if police brutality/racism is just a lazy shorthand for bad person and you have no interest in the actual POC affected, that's... really bad.
1 reply 0 retweets 66 likes -
also if you find objecting to racism "angry" and "annoying"... that's really REALLY bad too. Even if you feel that way, surely you have the good sense and media training not to say it on twitter...
1 reply 1 retweet 55 likes -
The movie didn't redeem him though. He didn't get his job back and ended the film on a road trip to kill a guy. The movie wasn't saying he's a good guy now in the same way McDormand's character wasn't necessarily in the right. It's meant to be ambiguous and start discussion.
2 replies 0 retweets 5 likes -
Replying to @mightynifty @csilverandgold and
Yes! And I think it would have been too neat/unrealistic if he had changed in his racism. That was simply a part of his personality, and the film wasn't about that part. It should be ok to feature three-dimensional racist characters in *stories* just like any other sort.
1 reply 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @AllesKlar71 @mightynifty and
Doing so doesn't mean the racism is OK, just that the story isn't simplistic.
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Replying to @AllesKlar71 @mightynifty and
k but do you get why today, in 2018, with police brutality all over the news, and all over our lives, we might be a little miffed that police brutality is treated as a minor background detail in the life of a sympathetic character?
2 replies 0 retweets 4 likes -
Replying to @csilverandgold @AllesKlar71 and
do you see why we might be a little miffed that this character never at any point is asked to come to terms with his racism, with any black characters, with any consequences for his violence against black people specifically?
2 replies 0 retweets 3 likes
like if you can reach empathy with an imaginary racist cop, surely, SURELY you can achieve empathy on this point with real actually existing black people who don't think police brutality should be reduced to a signifier for a white character's morality and nothing more.
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