M
Matt²
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110126/ap_en_ot/us_annie_remake
.... WTF??
....is this some sort of sick JOKE??
.... WTF??
....is this some sort of sick JOKE??
this is whyI wish my daddy could buy me a movie role.
maybe because Annie is white with curly red hair?Why not?
And they made that movie. Now they're making a new movie. No reason it has to be a white girl at all.maybe because Annie is white with curly red hair?
Can you imagine putting a red afro on a black girl and imagine the outcry from the public when she is ridiculed for being a black Ronald McDonald?
This is in the realm of "WTF are you thinking??"
Don't put words in my mouth.Soooooooo Annie HAS to be white?
Like it's a terrible thing to not have a white red headed Annie.
This is what you're actually saying.
This was at the top of my list of questionsReally.... we need a remake of Annie?
That is reason enough not to make this movie.Well. The father did Wild Wild West....
I was mentioning this to my sister, and following from the idea that Daddy Warbucks can't be a white guy in the movie, we think he'll be Indian, with the movie taking place in India and having Bollywood-style musical numbers.
Stanley Andrews played the King of Siam?Well the original did star the King of Siam.
Only in my head. For some reason I keep thinking its Yul ByrnnerStanley Andrews played the King of Siam?
If playing a black character as Annie is at all racist, it's because we think of black people when we think of poverty right now. Chances are good when the comic and film were made, people thought of black people as lower than poor - so much so that it wouldn't be proper for a white rich family to adopt one, nevermind the possibility of a black family being rich and adopting a poor black child.The poem contains four stanzas; the first introduces Annie and the following three are stories she is telling to young children. The stories each tell of a bad child who is snatched away by goblins as a result of their misbehavior. The underlying moral and warning is announced in the final stanza, telling children that they should obey their parents and be kind to the unfortunate, lest they suffer the same fate.