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Ronita Torcato's blogAn incomplete round-up of movie news, features & views from an independent journo based in Mumbai THE HELP : movie review
Starring: Emma Stone, Viola Davis, Bryce Dallas Howard, Jessica Chastain, Octavia Spencer,Allison Janney Writer-director Tate Taylor
Aibileen's friend Minny (Octavia Spencer) is different: she is opinionated and feisty, but gets thrashed (offscreen) by her abusive husband. Minny works for Hilly Holbrook (Bryce Dallas Howard) who is blind to the paradox of organising charity dinners for African children and championing the local campaign for separate bathrooms outside white homes for black people. Maybe,she's not blind. It could well be that she is, as Aibileen tells her in a defining moment, " a godless woman." Callous racism didn't originate with the likes of Hilly. Maimonides, a preeminent medieval Jewish thinker, philosopher and physician drew on the Biblical story of Noah ( Genesis 9:21-27 ) to justify subjugation of black people. Let me quote Maimonides (aka Rambam) "The Negroes found in the remote South, and those who resemble them from among them that are with us in these climes. The status of those is like that of irrational animals. To my mind they do not have the rank of men, but have among the beings a rank lower than the rank of man but higher than the rank of apes. For they have the external shape and lineaments of a man and a faculty of discernment that is superior to that of the apes." Mormons, Jehovah's Witnesses etc etc also quoted the Old Testament to oppress blacks. White "Christian" settlers would exterminate native American Indians, the Cherokees themselves would enslave Africans... Even "enlightened" souls like Thomas Jefferson, principal drafter of the Declaration of Independence, and the third President of the United States relied on non-Biblical justifications from history, anthropology, phrenology, and even chemistry to justify their belief in Black inferiority! To think South African's apartheid policy could oppress and control blacks for almost hald a century! Sadly, racism remains alive kicking in many parts of the world, including the US and dare I say it, India, my India? Though a fictional creature, Hilly could well be one of many in the sixties who believed that black people had different diseases that white people could catch from toilet seats. This is intriguing, considering that their children were raised (even suckled) by black nannies. I wouldn't be surprised if the Hilly types also thought black people have ink running through their veins! But all five fingers are not the same. Eugenia "Skeeter" Phelan (Emma Stone) is different from her set, which is trying to find her a husband - she's considered an old man when she's only 23. The "best" they can do is an admittedly handsome roughneck with crude manners and no taste. See, handsome is and handsome does. Unlike the other Southern belles, Skeeter earned a college degree while the rest married young and had babies. And she wants to write and make a difference which saddens her ill mother Charlotte (Allison Janney) who wants to see her "settled." Like small Mae, Skeeter was also neglected by her own mother and nurtured instead by her family's black housemaid, Constantine (Cicely Tyson),for whom Skeeter retains great affection. In flashbacks, she remembers her Constantine who told her, “Ugly is something that grows up inside you.”
Skeeter applies for a position at the local paper, and is offered a housecleaning advice column. Recalling sage advice from a NYC publisher to “Write about something that affects you,” So Skeeter decides to write a book about the lives of domestic helpers in Jackson.
What a wonderful,inspirational film this! The cast excels in principal and supporting roles. Viola Davis gets under our skin as the stoic Aibileen; Octavia Spencer is sassy and hurting under the bravado, Sissy Spacek is delightful in a small role as Hilly's Alzheimer-afflicted mother. Blonde and beautiful Celia Foote (Jessica Chastain, The Tree of Life) is riveting as the sweet "white trash” girl who is marginalised for marrying Hilly’s rich ex boyfriend Johnny (Mike Vogel).
25.11.2011 | Ronita Torcato's blog Cat. : Film review THE HELP director Taylor Tate racism FILM |
Tags for THE HELP : movie reviewAbout Ronita Torcato Torcato Agnela Ronita An incomplete round-up of movie news, features & views from an independent journo & (dare I say it:-) film critic in Mumbai View my profile Send me a message User imagesUseful linksThe Bulletin Board
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Torcato Agnela Ronita 
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