People Are Notttt Happy With Zoe Saldañaâs Response To A Mexican Journalist Telling Her That They Found âEmilia PĂ©rezâsâ Portrayal Of Mexico To Be âReally Hurtfulâ

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At this point, it goes without saying that Emilia PĂ©rez has been incredibly divisive â not least because of its leading star Karla SofĂa GascĂłnâs racism controversy, but also because of its portrayal of Mexico. When it was released, many viewers expressed that they felt the musical grossly misrepresented the Mexican community, which is especially controversial considering the lack of Mexican people who worked on it.

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Notably, the filmâs director, Jacques Audiard, admitted amid the press tour that he didnât do much research on Mexico before shooting Emilia PĂ©rez. Jacques is French, and he does not speak Spanish.
With this in mind, itâs perhaps unsurprising that Zoe was questioned about the filmâs representation of Mexico shortly after she accepted her Oscar.
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In the press room, a Mexican journalist pointed out to Zoe â who is Dominican and Puerto Rican â that there hasnât been much conversation about Mexico amid the Emilia PĂ©rez team throughout award season. âLess has been said about Mexico, which is the heart of [the film]âŠSo what would you say about the heart of this movie, but also about the topic, [which] is really hurtful for us Mexicans?â the reporter asked.
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Zoe replied, âFirst of all, Iâm very, very sorry that you and so many Mexicans felt offended. That was never our intention. We spoke from a place of love, and I will stand by that. I donât share your opinion. For me, the heart of this movie was not Mexico.â
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âWe werenât making a film about a country. We were making a film about four women,â she said. âAnd these women could have been Russian, could have been Dominican, could have been Black from Detroit, could have been from Israel, could have been from Gaza.â
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âAnd these women are still very universal women that are struggling every day, but trying to survive systemic oppression and trying to find the most authentic voices. So I will stand by that, but Iâm also always open to sit down with all of my Mexican brothers and sisters, and with love and respect, [have] a great conversation on how Emilia could have been done better. I welcome it,â she added.
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Several internet users were not impressed with Zoeâs response. One person tweeted, âCalling them her Mexican brothers and sisters after completely dismissing their feelings about the movie that won her an Oscar is wild,â while another said, âfor a non mexican woman to get up here and tell an actual mexican citizen that they dont agree with how mexico feels about this film is a pretty disrespectful and disgusting response.â
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ââThE hEaRt WaSnâT a CoUnRtYâ okayyy so you just admitted you were profiting off a culture which NO ONE IM THE FILM knows anything about,â someone else wrote, while one more user echoed: ââMexico was not the heart of the filmâ yet they chose the topic to be the gangs, kidnapping and violence against women issues happening in mexico, and chose to mimic mexican culture, and chose to set the film in MEXICO without any main crew member or set being from mexico ???â