Analysis Of The Movie Crash

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The film Crash occurs in the city of Los Angeles and its theme focuses on the diverse population of the city. It emphasizes alienation amongst the cultural groups where any meaningful connection occurs only if the characters in the film ‘crash’ into each other. The city is home to lively displays of wealth that is generally associated with the entertainment industry and so that makes income inequality a very negative aspect of the Los Angeles metropolis. There is a surge of immigrant population that struggles with racism, stereotypical behavior, and alienation in addition to the social inequality. The movie focuses on the lives of several characters in urban America. All of the characters exemplify vast differences in demography like age, gender, and class. These include characters of African American, Persian, Asian, Hispanic, Latino, and Caucasian descent. The film depicts these characters as harboring prejudices from their impressions and individual beliefs toward each other as well as using stereotypes to define each other. The concepts and specific approach that helps explain this film is identifying the issue of class, age, and ethnicity and how it shapes the views and actions of three characters in the film. Anthony, a black male that fits to his stereotype as a gangster from the ghettos of L.A.; Cameron Thayer, a successful black man that is conflicted about his role and identity in modern day society based on his color and career, and Farhad, a Persian immigrant that has his own conceptions and prejudice towards any person of color due to his beliefs and habitus, the cumulative embodied experiences that are shaped by structural realities. This film has its characters already shaped or in the process of shaping their ident... ... middle of paper ... ...either scaring him or killing him. This verifies him conforming to the views of Arab’s being “radical” and terrorists. At the end of the movie, the viewers realize that the ammunition he had for his gun were actually blanks and that is why no harm was done to the daughter. Although Farhad did fire his weapon the moment the repairman’s daughter jumped in, blanks or not, it showed him already having become a murderous racist (Katz, p. 122). Even though his substantive cohort and life chances are different, they are both similar in terms of their current life. Both men have daughters who they deeply care for and both are hard working people. He demonstrates a change in his personality towards other cultures and despite Farhad judging the Hispanic, he comes to an epiphany of some sort after the gun incident near the end of film and decides to change his views the world.

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