Wednesday, May 1, 2013

The Help (2011)

I watched The Help when it was broadcast on TV and even though the film is perhaps not a disaster (I mean, it is well meaning to some extent, whatever that means), it does not have the guts to deal with the topic it has chosen: racism. The question here of course becomes how a director is to navigate when depicting racism during the sixties in the South - self-righteous images of how everything has gotten much, much better abound, and it is tempting to please the audience with a story about sound and safe social development. Even though the theme is relevant (and contemporary - this is a film about domestic labor), and some of the characters hold up OK, the film gives in to so many temptations, some of them quite unforgivable. One thing that disturbed me was the use of humor as a safety net once things get too serious or bleak - let's throw in a joke so that the audience can relax for a while. And many of the jokes tend to be of the kind that makes one wonder what the agenda of the film really is (how is it funny that a black woman imagines that a white man might shoot her?) Another thing was the film's quite self-important presentation of its white do-good leading role, Skeeter, the girl who wants to be a journalist and who sets out to interview maids who work for white folk about racism, labor and family life. The film takes place in 1964 but the film does not distinguish itself in its image of the political upheavals that took place then. In the end, The Help choses the path of Uplifting Story, the kind where you are supposed to feel edified and uplifted afterwards and nobody is to feel ashamed or offended. Even though some scenes do reveal some interesting aspects of rage and/or resilience, the film never takes time to explore - it is to busy to churn out quite stereotypical image of southern racists and stoical oppressed people. Hopefully, there will be other, better films about domestic labor and racism. Sadly, The Help keeps haunting my mind and I didn't realize how outrageous it was until I started thinking about it afterwards, mulling over some of the "jokes" and "uplifting turns".

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