From: NewNowNext
Roland Emmerich is still licking his wounds from Stonewall, his 2015 drama recounting the Stonewall riots of 1969 that sparked the LGBT rights movement.
Upon its release last year, critics and activist derided the film for focusing on a cute white kid and relegating trans characters and people of color to secondary roles.
“Stonewall is perhaps even worse than some feared it would be,” moaned Richard Lawson in Vanity Fair. “More offensive, more whitewashed, even more hackishly made.”
Emmerich, who is readying to release the next Independence Day this week, thinks the criticism was unfair.
“My movie was exactly what they said it wasn’t. It was politically correct. It had black, transgender people in there,” he tells the Guardian. “We just got killed by one voice on the internet who saw a trailer and said, ’this is whitewashing Stonewall.’
He thinks he got the riots pretty right.
“Stonewall was a white event, let’s be honest,” says Emmerich. “But nobody wanted to hear that any more.”
Martha P. Johnson might disagree with that.
Maybe there was no dramatization of the riots that would have pleased everyone. Or maybe the guy best known for blowing up the Eiffel Tower wasn’t the one to direct it.
Emmerich continues to try, in his way, to advance the cause. He’s even put a gay couple in Independence Day: Resurgence. (Hopefully they have a better time of it than Harvey Fierstein in the 1996 original.)
“You start small and then you get bigger and bigger and bigger, and one day you have a gay character as the lead and nobody will wonder at it no more,” he told The Hollywood Reporter. “But we’re not there yet.”
He says studios still won’t allow a gay lead in a $150 million movie. “But when you have five characters, they allow [one of them to be gay] because they’re super-smart, you know?
Oh joy.
Independence Day: Resurgence hits theaters Thursday, June 23.
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