https://i.imgur.com/wo3l0lF.png
Scarface (1983) was an award-winning film that had a huge cultural impact, was one of Al Pacino's most iconic roles, launched the careers of several of it's stars, and is considered one of the greatest gangster films of all time.
And yet, despite having ZERO African-American roles, it was revered by the African-American hip-hop community, with multiple rap stars paying tribute to it, and some even taking on names from the film.
Why the hip-hop community still worships 'Scarface' - The Grio
Scarface is loved by rappers with an unwavering devotion that can safely be called obsession. It’s so beloved that there is even a documentary about its impact on hip hop. In “Scarface: Origins of a Hip-Hop Classic,” several rappers like Diddy, Snoop Dogg, and Method Man talk about the great influence the movie had on their life.
Why the movie 'Scarface' became a hip-hop icon - The Philidelphia Inquirer
"Every man that walked out of that theater had just that look on his face like when they were a baby and looked at their mother's eyes. We were walking out like we were zombies," said Schoolly D, who has referenced the movie in his work and mimicked the famous black-and-white "Scarface" poster of Al Pacino for his 1996 compilation record, "Gangster's Story."
"We had to go back three or four times."
How is this possible, when Black characters are completely absent from a film about Cuban refugees?
The same reason why audiences loved WALL-E, despite not being robots; representation is a myth.
It's not the color of an actor's skin that decides wether you identify with them, are able to insert yourself into the film, or enjoy the story. It's the characters and their journey that does that. That's the writing, direction, and acting.
Black audiences were engrossed by Scarface for the same reason white audiences enjoyed watching Family Matters and The Cosby Show for decades. Predator 2 was a cult classic to sci fi fans not because of the lead star's skin color, but because he was not-yet-but-almost-too-old-for-this-shit.
Here is a 30-second cam video of Avengers: Endgame, filmed during a premiere screening for a Tamil audience in Sri Lanka. Watch what happens when Thor appears:
https://i.imgur.com/CpzMZa6.mp4 (0:30s)
Do you think the Tamil audience reacted that way because Thor brought representation on behalf of Tamil skin color and culture?
The entire representation argument is based on the Two Doll Experiment from the 40s. Which literally came down to "black kids prefer white dolls and think they looker nicer." They extrapolated from this that because black kids mostly see white people, they begin to develop self esteem issues and complexes that lead to hating being black.
Like most "land mark experiments" from the 40s-70s its basically the most underwhelming thing possible that barely shows anything but what the "researchers" wanted it to say as they blow up minor findings into huge cultural opinions.
This one however is even more important, because it was the evidence that won Brown vs Board of Education. Thereby its responsible for basically the success of the Civil Rights Movement and every consequence that has come from it.
Also DBZ being basically a cornerstone of every Black or Latino boy's mind disproves any representation argument anyway.
So is the argument that black females are incapable of empathizing with other races, but black males value positive masculine traits and are less concerned with race?
Only half joking, I could see that actually being the case.
I'll go a step further.
Everything wrong with black people as a whole is the fault of black women and their limitless narcissism. And black dudes, when removed from their toxic influence, can be much more upstanding and positive people.
Still doesn't change genes.
Your genetic lineage is chosen by who your mom chooses to sleep with and then which ones she keeps.
Guess who black women love to sleep with? Why its the most violent, low IQ thugs imaginable. Creating an entire genepool with that rattling around in their head somewhere.