The Help Movie Analysis

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The movies we see today are influenced by cultures and traditions. From the production, to scripting, filming and directing. Each process is the effect of the culture and tradition the movie is portraying.
According to Cambridge Dictionary, the definition of culture is ‘The way of life, especially the general customs and beliefs, of a particular group of people at a particular time’ Culture encompasses religion, food, what we wear, how we wear it, our language, marriage, music, what we believe is right or wrong, how we sit at the table, how we greet visitors, how we behave with loved ones, and a million other things. (De Ross, 2015)
As for tradition, it’s definition is ‘A belief, principle, or a way of acting that people in a particular society …show more content…

‘The Help’ stirred widespread controversy over its depiction of race and class relations, its glossing over of ugly Southern history; and the race (Caucasian) of the author and filmmaker behind this potentially seminal story of African-Americans. (Ryzik, 2011). ‘The Help’ was not about portraying Civil Right, it was to show the struggles of an average black woman in the 1960s. It was a film meant to touch and warm the audience’s heart and sway their feelings. “It suggests that race relations in my country are still very black and white.” As Tate Taylor stated. Even in today’s society, there are still underlying racism. Movies like ‘The Help’ encourage people who are oppressed to voice out their experience and call out on the flaws of …show more content…

He was afraid that he would be accused of cultural appropriation and abusing ethnic folklore out of ignorance. He knew that he would be under public scrutiny should he take the wrong step. In today’s world there are still traces of racism and white superiority complex in our society, and definitely in the film industry. Starting from the casting of characters, in recent years, Hollywood industry also faced controversies on white-washing, which is the practice of Caucasian actors being cast as characters who were written as or originally played by an ethnic minority person (Wheaton, 2017), on live action films such as Ghost In the Shell and Death Note.
Report from the Media, Diversity, & Social Change Initiative at the University of Southern California's Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism find that the representation of women, minorities, LGBTQ people, and disabled characters remains the same in the past few years. Due to media conglomerates and lack of diversity amongst media producers, we see a large racial disparity of representation in film. (Hill, 2017). As a result, most of these groups find themselves being

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