MovieChat Forums > Song of the South (1946) Discussion > White folks don't find this film racist?...

White folks don't find this film racist? Imagine that...


Can't believe that.

Maybe they WOULD get upset about a fat, orange pedophile trying to be POTUS (Piece of Tanned, Ugly Shit)

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Take your meds.

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Intelligent, rational people of all races don't find this film racist. You probably aren't smart enough to imagine that.

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What part of the movie is waycist to you?

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White folks don't find this film racist?


And *you* do? It might actually say a lot more about you to be honest.

I saw this as a child in the theater (a decidedly black child who just went to a Saturday matinee in the early 1960s, but I digress). Personally, I loved that a black man was the star of a movie, a black man that everyone loved, especially the children. Maybe you'd prefer if the kids were terrified of him or the parents would never let a white child near a black man? Would that be less racist?

Most people see the great James Baskett doing what he does so beautifully, but you see racism. This same exact movie would have worked just fine with any great song and dance actor regardless of color. I can imagine Bert Lahr or Jimmy Durante playing this role (both contemporaries of Mr. Baskett) and the movie would have been just as good.

But in some people's mind, showing a happy, well adjusted black man during the reconstruction period of the south who just happened to be friends with white folks is racist.

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Stop making sense.

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Great reply. I haven't seen this film in many years--not since I was a child and the movie was still widely available on VHS--but I always try to remember something that was racist about the film I can't do it. I always think to myself, "Wasn't Uncle Remus a GOOD GUY in the film? And weren't the white people respectful of him?

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Uncle Remus was beloved by all (which is problematic according to some because he was a black man in post Civil War America). He told stories of life lessons to the children through song.

Again, this movie wasn't about black people's plight in the postbellum era of the U.S. Any talented song and dance man could have made this movie, even a white one. I honestly however think Baskett was chosen because he was black and it was Disney's way of portraying black people in a positive light in cinema, particularly since most white Americans exposure to blacks in movies was in roles of servitude or even buffoonery. This was 1946 after all.

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You're dealing with the new racism. White liberals (usually middle-aged women) telling black and brown people what should offend them and what their culture should be.

You gave an example for black people. I'll give one for Central and South Americans - Latinx.

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Pretty fast response...for a movie made in 1946

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I am Black and like the film.

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He was waiting for the Internet to be invented. And then it took over 40 years to learn how to use it.

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Let me guess the OP is probably white and expect us to feel horrible about being white. Go take your meds.

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Why would any normal human being feel horrible about being white?

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That's a huge portion of the Liberal base. White liberals who hate themselves for being white based on the sins of the past. It's a mental disorder.

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Most African Americans don't find it offensive either. It was based on tales from African American folklore.

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