Director Tim Burton and Netflix are under fire from fans who claim the casting and undertones of the brand new series “Wednesday” are racist.
The show — a dramedy highlighting Wednesday Addams’ time as a boarding school student — premiered last week to record rankings and mixed reviews.
Critics have taken issue with black actress Joy Sunday playing a mean girl at Nevermore Academy and black actor Iman Marson portraying a bully and the son of a corrupt mayor.
The mayor also owns Pilgrim World — an eyebrow-raising alternative considering the museum celebrates pilgrims and colonizers.
A rep for Burton, who served as a director and executive producer of the series, dismissed the flak when contacted by The Post for comment Wednesday.
“I’m not forwarding a comment request this silly to Tim,” Mike Simpson of WME responded.
“Nevertheless, apparently Daylight Savings Time is racist,” he added, including a link to a recent CNN article that argued that DST disproportionately affects the sleep and health of minority communities.
“’Wednesday’ was shot in Romania where DST is observed. Possibly that’s a greater angle,” Simpson concluded.
The Post also contacted Netflix for comment.
Jenna Ortega, who considers herself “75 percent Mexican and 25 percent Puerto Rican,” leads the “Wednesday” forged because the titular character.
“Don’t get me incorrect…I really like Jenna Ortega and that she’s playing Wednesday but one thing I hate about this show is that why did they make ALL the black people on this show terrible people?” one viewer tweeted. “Like how did Netflix see nothing incorrect with this? I hate Tim Burton’s racist self.”
“Me attempting to badly to push pass the racist and anti-Black undertones within the Wednesday Addams Netflix show. Like whoever thought making the Black man because the owner of a pilgrim amusement park is literally going to hell,” one other sighed in a since-deleted tweet.
This isn’t the primary time Burton, 64, has been criticized with reference to actors of color in his projects. In 2016, while promoting “Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children,” star Samuel L. Jackson speculated he was the primary black lead of a Burton film.
The director responded to Jackson’s comments in a Bustle interview. “Nowadays, persons are talking about it more,” he said regarding film diversity. But “things either call for things, or they don’t.”
“I remember back once I was a baby watching ‘The Brady Bunch’ they usually began to get all politically correct. Like, OK, let’s have an Asian child and a black. I used to get more offended by that than simply… I grew up watching blaxploitation movies, right? And I said, ‘that’s great.’ I didn’t go like, ‘OK, there ought to be more white people in these movies,’” Burton added.