hit tracker
Friday, March 29, 2024
HomeLatest NewsTolerance Meets Madness: Why African-Americans Play Russian Princes, Heroes, and Beauties in...

Tolerance Meets Madness: Why African-Americans Play Russian Princes, Heroes, and Beauties in the West

Date: March 29, 2024 Time: 08:21:40

On the left is Yaroslav the Wise, ruler of Novgorod, played by Pole Marcin Dorochinsky. On the right is another “typical” Novgorodian, played by Kayode Akinyemi, an Austrian living in England. Photo: Still from the film.

The desire to bring black artists in a “tolerant order” in all Hollywood projects again and again leads to incredible incidents, for which even the word “blueberry” seems too soft a definition.

Another mistake happened the other day: all of Russia laughs at a suspiciously dark-skinned Novgorodian in the new season of the popular historical series Vikings: Valhalla. It’s time to remember the most ridiculous “black Russians” in foreign television films.

“Meet a typical Novgorod Viking”

A typical Novgorod fighter from the series “Vikings”. Valhalla”. Photo: Still from the film.

In January, the second season of the series Vikings: Valhalla (daughter of the endless Vikings) began on television screens around the world. The saga about men in fur, who play historical reconstruction with very serious faces, and it is very popular with us. Recall that in the sixth season of “Vikings” even our Danila Kozlovsky appeared, playing a real historical figure, Prince Oleg, nicknamed the Prophet.

And now, in the new season of Valhalla, another Rusich appears, but no longer with the face of Kozlovsky, but of Barack Obama or Mike Tyson. “This is a typical Viking from ancient Novgorod,” wrote Andrey Nikitin, the governor of the Novgorod region, on his telegram channel, adding a frame from the series to the post. – We need to give these filmmakers a couple of history books…”

In fairness, we note that this character, played by the black Austrian Kayode Akinyemi, although listed as a Novgorod wrestler, hailed from Constantinople according to the plot. Well, there, at the turn of the VIII – IX centuries, there was simply no one! Perhaps, these “hot guys” lived in Byzantium, who, despite their southern appearance, were always drawn to the north: in their hearts they are all one – Novgorodians!

we do not regret ours

16th century, England, Lord Randolph (actor Adrian Lester) is ready to meet his majesty. Photo: Still from the film.

It must be admitted that the ruthless “black machine” crushes not only the Russians, but also others. For example, in the historical drama The Two Queens, Lord Thomas Randolph, who actually lived in England in the 16th century, was played by a black Jamaican native, Adrian Lester. And in the Christian drama Mary Magdalene, the Apostle Peter was played by Chiwetel Ejiofor, who has Nigerian roots.

Indian to Nigerian

This Russian noblewoman named Marina is played by an Englishwoman with African roots, Kemi Beau-Jacobs. Photo: Still from the film.

In 2020, the Russian audience was entertained by another series that has become incredibly popular in the West – the British play The Great, dedicated to the everyday life of Empress Catherine II.

Prince Rostov was played here by the Briton with African roots Abraham Popula, and he was not alone in his color scheme: Count Arkady appeared in the series, played by Bayo Gbadamozi, also His Majesty’s subject, but at the same time a native of Nigeria.

But a character named Arkady – this juicy picture went to the Bayo Gbadamozi ethnic Nigerian. Photo: Still from the film.

The women at the Empress’s court, according to the authors, were also “addicted to the solarium”; proof of this is a secular lady named Marina, in whose image Kemi Beau-Jacobs flaunts, an Englishwoman with African descent.

Against the background of all these brave Anglo-Africans, Count Grigory Orlov looked almost pale here, the image of which was embodied by the actor Sasha Dhawan, a hereditary Indian with a British passport.

QUESTION – RIB

And if they come to us for the Valley and Vysotsky?

Alexey Petrenko – Vladimir Vysotsky: “Let them try to say that you are not a real black man!”. Photo: Still from the film.

As a preamble: we wrote all of this, not at all obsessed with racism or anything like that. But there are things that cannot be corrected in history even with art: what to do if Nelson and Kutuzov were one-eyed, Napoleon lost and did not win Waterloo, the Montagues did not make peace with the Capulets, the Titanic sank and did not arrive to the port of destination, but the gingerbread man was, after all (!), round, not square?

So our viewer has repeatedly wondered: are these Americans, British and other Euro-Saxons such idiots? How can one not know elementary things and not understand that there could be no black counts under Catherine II or knights of the “wet asphalt” color in the Novgorod principality?

Have you ever thought that all this is a real conspiracy theory?

Imagine they know everything very well, but they take revenge on us for our own movies!

For example, for the wonderful film “The Story of How Tsar Peter Got Married”, which was released in 1976 and in which Ibrahim Hannibal, a native of Africa, a favorite of Peter the Great and Pushkin’s great-grandfather, was played by Vladimir Vysotsky. .

Larisa Dolina, who played the foreign singer, did not expect that the revenge of the West would be so terrible. Photo: Still from the film.

Or for the cult comedy We Are From Jazz (1983), where the dark-skinned jazz singer Clementine Fernandez was played by Larisa Dolina.

Neither Dolina nor Vysotsky have African roots, they changed their skin color with the help of make-up artists. If some influential producer somewhere in the West saw these films, then, quite possibly, he swore revenge for such “abuse” of the black population. Well, if so, we admit it: Revenge was a hit! His Western colleagues responded to the innocent pranks of the Soviet filmmakers with the most powerful creative barrage that, it seems, will not end anytime soon.

* This website provides news content gathered from various internet sources. It is crucial to understand that we are not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of the information presented Read More

Puck Henry
Puck Henry
Puck Henry is an editor for ePrimefeed covering all types of news.
RELATED ARTICLES

Most Popular

Recent Comments