>Black could be anywhere, it's like tryn'a catch smoke, like tryna catch smoke with ya bare hands
What the fuck was Cuaron thinking?
Black could be anywhere, it's like tryn'a catch smoke, like tryna catch smoke with ya bare hands
Who was dis kid and why was he so prominent in prisoner of azkaban only?
Its Bem from Nigeria
IT WAS ALL A DREAM
Deh!
Ommigosh, that’s was scary
that line was good though
I didn't say it wasn't, it's ironic that the nigger is the one saying it
why is that ironic?
The two times that black person has any lines in the movie he's talking about
(1) omen of death
(2) black could be anywhere
its just funny
>black saying black could be anywhere
Oooh now I fucking get why this keeps getting posted.
inb4 brainlet
I already know.
>GTA SA main theme starts playing ominously in the background
What the fuck is wrong with Rowling.
6>3>7>5>2>8>4>1>FB2>FB
Yeah, that's Britain.
It was all a dream, I used to read word up magazine.
Al Jolson lookin nigga
was this guy a pure blood or mud blood in the canon
IT WAS ALL A MEME
I USED TO READ DAILY PROPHET MAGAZINE
Voldemort and DumbleD up in the pensieve
Hanging portraits on my wall
Every Saturday, Quidditch, seeking girls, let me work my magic on them all
I let my wand rock til my wand popped
Smoking tentacular leaves and mandrake sippin on Slughorns private stock
based
ONE TWO THREE FOUR FIVE SIX SEVEN EIGHT NINE
This scene isn't racist at all; it's commentary on racism. This scene, and the other scene, are director Alfonso Cuaron's way of challenging J.K. Rowling's use of the words "black magic" and "dark magic" to mean evil magics. Cuaron's casting of this particular actor, who is new to the series as of Prisoner of Azkaban, is very intentional. He's a Black actor who resembles the mammy archetype; he makes us recall the caricatures of Black people that were popular in the 1800s and early 1900s, when racism was more apparent in the U.S. Cuaron uses this actor to call attention to Rowling's use of the words "black" and "dark" to mean evil and bad, and to plant in viewers' minds the idea that this kind of language can be harmful to people of color. Do many viewers come to this conclusion? Sadly, no. They seem to think it's just a joke made in poor taste, which they chuckle at before dismissing. The only director of color to work on the Harry Potter movies didn't include the Black-commenting-on-black scenes to be funny, but to make a point. If these scenes make people uncomfortable, they should ask themselves why?