knives wrote:I think by having the film set in the past though makes it othered automatically.
Well, yes and no- I mean, obviously, people had different racial attitudes in the past, but the point that's difficult to get people to understand is the holders of those different attitudes were normal, everyday people, not necessarily virulent hate-driven bigots. It's easy to see that those attitudes are wrong now, but it's difficult to get people to see that the only way to have known that then would be to think about it- meaning that someone could easily watch a movie about the destructive power of intolerance, and viciously mock a transexual person on the way home.
Compare that with say,
The Sopranos, where the depiction of racism is totally normalized in past and present- we the viewer may not empathize with the characters we're watching, but it's not because the show is pushing us to identify with someone who opposes them- instead, it generally uses every trick at its disposal to seduce you into identification, then punishes you for it. It's not a pleasant process, and it can seem sadistic, but it can actually push a viewer into reflection in a way no
Uncle Tom's Cabin melodrama between the good white overlords and the bad ones could.
I think the melodramas have their place- after all,
Uncle Tom's Cabin made an indisputable difference it the way people viewed slavery as an institution- but as historical fiction, it just feels self-congratulatory. Instead of challenging the audience to understand how people were, it picks the problems that are no longer visible and makes us feel good for having solved them. I understand why that's crowd-pleasing methodology, and at least
The Help doesn't totally white-wash the past and pretend everything was just fine for black people in Mississippi in the '60s- and unlike
Mississippi Burning, at least it sounds like this one has actual black characters and not just heroic white people fighting to free the child-like negroes. It's not the kind of movie I'm going to attack people for liking, by any means. But it's hard to get past the feeling that the narrative is fundamentally about and for white people.