Right, being against open borders or a literal wall are mutually exclusive positions. Got it.
Um.. what?
You said concern over illegal immigration was "completely manufactured bs for conservatives", and I replied that it was once a concern for liberals, as well.
In any case, I fail to see how continuing this would be productive.
How does this t-shirt support claim that "inserting feminist politics into the films was part of the problem, at least."?
The producer of the movies, and a group of others, wore a t-shirt with a feminist slogan, did interviews promoting feminist talking points, promoted the movies as feminist, critics reviewed the movies saying they were great feminist films, the film content had feminist tropes (Mary Sue female character, incompetent male characters), people who criticised the film were widely called misogynist, there were articles in the press pre-release about exclusively male trolls online 'review bombing' Rotten Tomatoes by saying they were not interested in seeing the film, getting the site to disable that feature for the film, and 'correct' the user review scores after release, etc.
Is your position really that the film content and quality was unaffected by the feminist ideology?
I am pretty sure that their decision to include minorities
There were minorities in the original films. Somehow there was no backlash.
On the other hand "Parasite" won too many awards to mention, including oscar for best movie and it's highly ideologically driven, so is latest Joker etc etc.
Was either film advertised and promoted as an ideology, and not the content of the film, with any criticism entirely the result of hating the ideology or proponents of that ideology?
There is a difference between a film having an ideology and a film being used to overtly push an ideology.