When Micheal B. Jordan was first announced as the famous Fantastic Four character The Human Torch aka Johnny Storm, the internet went mad because he’s black but this week, Jordan has came out with a statement about the controversy. Read it in full below. Fantastic Four is out in all theatres on August 7.
“You’re not supposed to go on the internet when you’re cast as a superhero. But after taking on Johnny Storm in Fantastic Four – a character originally written with blond hair and blue eyes – I wanted to check the pulse out there. I didn’t want to be ignorant about what people were saying. Turns out this is what they were saying ‘A black guy? I don’t like it. They must be doing it because Obama’s president’ and ‘It’s not true to the comic’ or even ‘They’ve destroyed it!’. It used to bother me, but it doesn’t anymore”.
“I can see everybody’s perspective, and I know I can’t ask the audience to forget 50 years of comic books. But the world is a little more diverse in 2015 than when the Fantastic Four comic came out in 1961. Plus, if Stan Lee writes an email to my director saying, ‘You’re good. I’m okay with this’, who am I to go against that? Some people may look at my casting as political correctness or an attempt to meet a racial quota, or as part of the year of ‘Black Film’, or they could look at it as a creative choice by the director, Josh Trank, who is in an interracial relationship himself – a reflection of what a modern family looks like today”.
“This is a family movie about four friends – two of whom are myself and Kate as my adopted sister – who are brought together by a series of unfortunate events to create a unity and a team. That’s the message of the movie, if people can just allow themselves to see it. Sometimes you have to be the person that stands up and says ‘I’ll be the one to shoulder all this hate. I’ll take the brunt for the next couple of generations’. I put that responsibility on myself. People are always going to see each other in terms of race, but maybe in the future we won’t talk about it as much”.
“Maybe, if I set an example, Hollywood will start considering more people of colour in other prominent roles, and maybe we can reach the people who are stuck in the mindset that ‘it has to be true to the comic book’, or maybe we have to reach past them. To the trolls on the Internet, I want to say: Get your head out of your computer. Go outside and walk around. Look at the people walking next to you. Look at your friends’ friends and who they’re interacting with. And just understand this is the world we live in. It’s okay to like it“.
#Peace.Love.FantasticFour