Nu Vibez and Roleplay Guide Magazine - December 2015 | Page 51

black man wearing a stormtrooper’s uniform”. He goes on to say: The man, who is played by John Boyega (of Attack the Block), pops into view perspiring and panting hard. He is surrounded by desert: in all likelihood the rolling dunes of Tatooine, the homeworld of both Luke Skywalker and Darth Vader. And he appears to be in trouble. Maybe the only people more alarmed than Boyega by his circumstances were commenters surprised by the sight of a black man’s head emerging from the white plate armor of an Imperial stormtrooper. People on Reddit compared the trailer to a scene from the 1987 Mel Brooks spoof Space Balls, a gag that plays up a black stormtrooper as jive-talkin’. In other threads and on Twitter, some people registered mere racist shock. But a few corners of the Internet turned to the internal logic of the Star Wars universe to appeal the presence of a black stormtrooper. Didn’t the prequels reveal that all stormtroopers were white clones? When Boyega’s character, Finn, popped off that helmet, I, like some others, was surprised. Instead of being upset about it however or feeling like it was “that damned affirmative action program has even managed to reach outer space, I was intrigued. I thought ahh they want us to react and say how will they address the clone issue with all the original stormtroopers. It, I believe, was actually to stimulate our thinking, not to expose the racism that’s still with us even to- day, after all the sacrifices and victories that have made things better than they use to be for people of all colors. I don’t want to bore you with my theories on how or if they are going to cover this issue of Finn being a black trooper. Yet it would be remiss to not point out that fact that the bounty hunter used as the cloning template in the prequels was not white. Writer Kriston Capps sums this point up well below: “Those clones weren’t white in any sense of the word. Jango Fett, the bounty hunter who served as the genetic template, was culturally (and perhaps ethnically) a Mandalorian. And the actor who portrays him, Temuera Derek Morrison, is a New Zealand-born person of brown skin and partial Maori descent”. So my fellow Force fans and movie goers there you have it. Once again Star Wars has created dialogue and reminded us that you don’t have to go to a galaxy far far away to experience the dark side. I think once the movie’s out and the issue can be discussed without ruining a plot line, we all will have something we need to talk about. Oh … and may the force be with us all. NU VIBEZ & ROLEPLAY GUIDE MAGAZINE 51