[quote="Elton John"]After watching the jungle book remake, I hope they nix the traditional musical numbers unless they can animate them properly and get genuinely good singers. Instead, I hope they include the compositions of the musical numbers into the regular score. Seeing and hearing christopher walken sing 'I wanna be like you' was a low point in the movie.
I also hope they get a voice cast that's at least 80% black or African. I think it was fine back then for the original but the more I think about it the more it feels awkward to have so many African animals with british accents or american yankee doodle dandy accents.
Also, more lebo M music please. New Lebo music would be wonderful.[/quote]
I agree with you on both points, and I quoted you specifically because you're only the second person I've seen in any medium mention the potential casting decisions and actually advocating a mostly -- if not entirely -- African cast. It's interesting because this actually doesn't seem to be a particularly popular idea among most of the internet community and other people I've talked to about this in years past, and I genuinely don't understand why that is, or more specifically, what goes through someone's mind to make them so vehemently against the idea.
The most interesting experience I've had discussing this topic came up over the summer on the comments section of one of the videos of "My Own Way". A fairly young black girl -- based on how she referred to herself -- was pointing out how happy she was to have such a cool character voiced by a vocally talented black girl whom she could identify with, and then everyone else in the comments did the standard "You had to bring race into this..." line. I retorted with the facts that Elton John mentioned in his post, adding that
The Lion King franchise is so popular that it has further reinforced -- in the mind of Americans at least, if not the rest of the Western world -- certain stereotypes about Africa, even if it wasn't in an attempt to be malicious. It was this last part specifically that irked someone, who incredulously replied "it's a show about animals mainly lions for kids. it ain't solidifying anything. its like saying I saw the little mermaid so I believe that there is a massive mermaid kingdom under the sea."
So then I wrote a brief response -- three short paragraphs and a link to the World Cup Ghana giraffe incident a couple years ago -- and brought it back to the original topic of representation. I made very clear that I don't praise "My Own Way" because Fuli's voice actress is a black girl, and the song isn't good because Diamond White is black (a bit of a funny oxymoron; more amusing when you realize Dusan Brown's last name is Brown); it's just a good song and she happens to be black and performed it really well.
Needless to say, my last, most comprehensive response is the one that got deleted, and I don't know who was responsible for it, but it really hammers home the point to me about how defensive at least some members of
The Lion King fandom seem to be on this topic. This little girl who initially commented was simply expressing her delight in hearing a beautiful black voice on a show she seems to like a lot, and all these twenty-somethings have to go and rain on her parade. It's like, why?

(I actually like these little smilies.) I assume that's not the case here, and I don't seek to pick fights with anyone over it, although I'm not sorry if a substantive discussion on race/ethnicity offends you.
Given all of this, I'm very curious to see how Disney decides to cast the new version and what the cultural shock will be, if any, regarding the casting decisions, especially now that
Black Panther is generating a lot of hype over on their Marvel front and for their own silly reasons people are freaking out about how 'black' they fear that movie is going to be. And while we're on Marvel and Disney, I feel like Lupita Nyong'o (my celebrity crush) and Idris Elba (a man crush if I ever had one) kinda can't be in this film... I don't know, it just seems like too obvious of a choice and they get used too much when American studios need an African or a black person who is kinda foreign enough to put some distance between the character they're playing an a mainstream American audience. Plus, Idris has already played a bad@#$ big cat in a Disney 'live action' remake; it just feels really repetitive to have him do that again, even if he pulls out one of his African accents. (Which is another thing; it would be great if all of these characters had actual African accents. Apparently Timon was supposed to have a "spritely Johannesburg Township" accent in the original script, so I'd love to see that interpretation!) They should've saved him for
The Lion King is all I'm saying...