[Chapter 665: Technology is the Most Important Thing]
Regarding the film about the assassination of Kennedy, JFK, that was pretty much it. It was a movie that didn't have much impact, so what could you really tear apart? As long as one side stopped responding, the others couldn't continue playing.
Hollywood didn't care about losers, and neither did Arica. Life was so dull that it indeed needed sothing positive. With all the talk about assassinations and flops, you all just wouldn't let it go.
The Arican attitude generally leaned towards not liking losers. As for The Silence of the Lambs, well, that was the triumph of a loser who made a coback. It probably counted as one of the Aricans' favorite plots.
After winning big at the Oscars, The Silence of the Lambs returned to theaters. That was quite rare for a movie that had already been released on videotape.
It seed that the more than $1 million that had been thrown down before its release was likely to recover its investnt. Although the company would still go bankrupt, those rights could still fetch a pretty penny.
...
When William White took over Marvel, this was the first movie based on a comic. Even though the Blade character was relatively obscure, it still attracted a fair amount of attention.
The U.S. believed that there was no discrimination here; everyone was playing the ga in a relatively fair environnt. However, there weren't many comic characters that featured black guys.
Blade was considered quite unconventional; not only did it feature a black lead, but he was also the hero. White Films kicked off with a relatively niche comic, and Hollywood naturally had its own interpretations.
Adapting comic books was different from adapting bestsellers. Although both faced criticism for not being true to the original, comics with their illustrations made actor selection and adaptations far more difficult.
If comic characters looked too generic, the movie would flop. If they were too distinctive, casting beca a headache.
While others didn't know why this movie was being made, William White was very much aware. They said that the crying child always got candy. After the black community made a big scene, they benefited a lot. Now that everyone began to pander to the black community, the film Blade cleverly capitalized on the trend.
You couldn't afford not to pander; just take Los Angeles as an example. Don't even ntion the Native Aricans. If you add the Germans and other Europeans together, the total number does not exceed 30%.
[T/N: According to Chat GPT, population rough percentage breakdowns of ethnicities in current LA: Latino/Hispanic: ~48-50%, White (Non-Hispanic): ~28-30%, Asian: ~11-12%, Black or African Arican: ~9-10%, Mixed Race and Other: ~3-5%, Native Arican, Pacific Islander, and Other Minorities:
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