It's not really about that though. Changing up a well established story or character in any way is going to attract scrutiny. If they made James Bond an American, or the Ghostbusters female, it'd be a move that would attract a certain amount of criticism from people. Those people don't need to be racist or sexist to be unhappy with that change, and it's not an issue of being believable either - to make a change to a character in such a way, there generally needs to be a reason behind the change.JimB said:I must ask you to forgive me if I say I have zero respect for anyone who can understand a white dude getting bit by a nuclear spider and getting powers but becomes confused if the spider bites a black-ish dude. Sticking to walls only makes sense if one's ancestry is western European, huh?Verlander said:For mainstream audiences, Spider-Man is white. Changing that up, regardless of how legitimate the reasons might be, will confuse moviegoers and distract from the character.
(Please note I understand that you are presenting this as your understanding of the movie-going public's position rather than as your own, and as such my condemnation is not intended to apply to you.)
This is the problem with Miles Morales. When Heimdal was "blackwashed", it was to increase the diversity of an all white cast. When Johnny Storm was the same, it was because the new series was abandoning it's comic roots and relaunching as a young adult film. The motivations behind these changes are clear, even if they're less than honourable (I personally would love to see a greater diversity in these films by introducing fully fleshed characters, rather than what I perceive to be tokenism). Neither of those reasons apply to Civil War, so why change the formula?
The problem isn't so much that there's no reason to change the character up - between 2002 and 2014 there were 5 Peter Parker films. I'm pretty sick of him. It's that, with there being no clear reason to change him, the blanks are going to be filled with people's opinions on the matter, and a character and film franchise as big as this is going to have some major coverage. What will Fox, CNN, MSNBC etc have to say on that matter? What reason will they make up? It's the "liberal agenda", or "political correctness gone mad"? Casting Morales as Spiderman won't attract any more people to the cinema than will already go, but the discussion around that casting may stop people from going, and Marvel cares about it's bottom line.