Disney CEO Says Rogue One: A Star Wars Story Contains No Political Statements
While Rogue One: A Star Wars Story may embrace diversity, and while its writer has taken to social media to criticize U.S. President-Elect Donald Trump using imagery from the franchise, Disney executives want audiences to know that it is not an overtly political film, at least as far as real-world, modern-day politics are concerned.
"I think the whole story has been overblown and, quite frankly, it's silly," Disney CEO Bob Iger told THR at the film's premiere. "I have no reaction to [this] story at all. Frankly, this is a film that the world should enjoy. It is not a film that is, in any way, a political film. There are no political statements in it, at all."
It is a difficult conversation to fully avoid, in part because of the scope of Star Wars's cultural influence: whoever is the party in opposition, they can claim Star Wars's themes of rebellion and resistance as their own. John McCain, during his 2000 election campaign, famously compared navigating the Republican primaries to being Luke Skywalker -- a single, seemingly-easy target for establishment Republicans who wanted him out.
Those same establishment Republicans -- or at least their supporters online -- have had eight years of Obama-as-Vader memes, and moments after Trump was declared the winner of the U.S. Presidential election, that narrative flipped to the Republicans being the Empire -- a version of events supported on Twitter by Episode VIII director Gary Whitta and franchise star Mark Hamill.It is also difficult to defend a position as far in the other direction as Iger went, claiming that there are no politics in the movie at all; the Star Wars franchise has always had sociopolitical undertones, and the movie was marketed on the idea of "rebellion" and "revolution" at a time when candidates like Trump and Democrat Bernie Sanders were using that same rhetoric in their campaigns. Implicit or explicit, it is difficult to imagine a scenario where some reasonable readings of the film won't be used to advance a political agenda on one side or the other (or, more likely, both).
And while Iger identifies Rogue One as one of the most diverse blockbusters ever made -- again insisting that is not a political statement -- there is a vocal contingent of the audience who sees diversity in casting as inherently political. While not everyone within that contingent can agree on whether it is an inherently positive or negative thing, it is essentially guaranteed that race and gender will continue to dominate the conversation, as they have since the first teaser revealed a female lead in the film.
Disney CEO Says Rogue One: A Star Wars Story Contains No Political Statements
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