r/Angryupvote 13d ago

Angry upvote Kek

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30.4k Upvotes

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u/JR21K20 13d ago

They picked the whitest Greek woman they could find didn’t they?

5

u/dm_me_goblins 13d ago edited 13d ago

As a Greek person I find it fucking hilarious how clueless this comment is. Klelia is from Thessaloniki, which is to the north of the country which has a larger amount of "fairer" Greeks. Helen was, in the stories, from Sparta where people tend to be a lot swarthier but that doesn't mean there aren't plenty of fair skinned, blonde or even redheaded people from there either. Greeks are very varied in appearance, contrary to what everyone is saying in this discussion. Klelia looks pretty much exactly how I'd imagine a blonde Greek girl to look down to her slightly sunkissed skin and muddy green eyes, my mother has the exact same kind of appearance and she's Greek Cypriot from Northern Cyprus, so even further south than Sparta.

It's ironic how in a topic that's throwing accusations about racism around people are incorrectly assuming we're all olive skinned with dark eyes and hair. Ask any Greek what Helen looked like, they'll show you someone who looks like Klelia. Casting a 40 year old black woman is just a very odd thing to do, I don't like how people immediately assume racism is the driving force behind questioning it.

I'm more annoyed that Nolan is directing the movie than the castings, he lacks any warmth and the movie is ugly and muted. None of these things resonate with the stories I was raised with or the culture we share with it which is really disappointing. People don't tend to view us through a modern lens just romanticising our history and mythology... They could at least get a tiny bit of it correct. A lot of Greek people feel marginalised and ignored when stuff like this happens.

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u/OkChip6545 13d ago

Isn't it tiring how americans reduce your whole country culture, heregitage and history to fit their narratives?