You are suggesting we pretend that Hollywood is not as an industry slated against minorities and blacks in particular, such that only very few CAN make it through the hoops, and then with this willing ignorance, we look at Best Man, Soul Food, Brown Sugar, and Perry's films and complain when they don't match up to the generic dramedies and romantic comedies that come out of Hollywood every year. Never mind the films compared don't even belong to the same GENRE. Tarantino does not do family or romantic comedies. Now, tarantino himself is not even a regular director even in Hollywood, he is a star. Somehow he is proof that blacks simply cant produce a good film. Now, Steve McQueen is black though he is not American, he certainly did a fabulous job, and the Butler did well too, both last year.
What is the point you are making? You are saying, money doesn't count, which is ridiculous to any ears that know anything about movies, next you are saying ethnicity doesn't count, which is also equally strange. In ther words, vooke, you are creating an unrealistic scenario in order to make a conclusion that there's something about Black people that makes them incapable of making a film as good as tarantino. You are saying that the biggest factors that determine film success should just be ignored in order to support this conclusion that you made when you compared tyler Perry films with Hollywood block busters films of a COMPLETELY different genre, and extrapolated from that this strange comparison between the RACE of negroes and whites. Hmmm.
Financiers matter: just like with Christian and other niche films, the mainstream will not support it, they therefore have to rely on their own.
Financiers matter: just like with Christian and other niche films, the mainstream will not support it, they therefore have to rely on their own.