Anonymous wrote:Until the Story of the hunt is told by the Lion, the tale of the hunt will always glorify the hunter. – African Proverb -
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe when African politicans and governments get their shit togther they wont need outside help anymore, not from white, purple, blue or black folks. The truth is that they often do need help from outsiders, the Ebola outbreak is a prime example.
These situations often lead to good stories that writers and Hollywood capiltalize on. If these events weren't happening, there wouldnt be movies and books about them.
Besides, if I need help that desperately, I damn well wouldnt care what the person who helped me looked like.
+1
Anonymous wrote:
Besides, if I need help that desperately, I damn well wouldnt care what the person who helped me looked like.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe when African politicans and governments get their shit togther they wont need outside help anymore, not from white, purple, blue or black folks. The truth is that they often do need help from outsiders, the Ebola outbreak is a prime example.
These situations often lead to good stories that writers and Hollywood capiltalize on. If these events weren't happening, there wouldnt be movies and books about them.
Besides, if I need help that desperately, I damn well wouldnt care what the person who helped me looked like.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting. I hadn't heard of it before. As a white person, I see it as a movie about three brave refugees coming here to an entirely new culture. A white woman is just the person that happens to be helping them.
Same. I'm open to hearing why my view is clouded.
NP. Most movies about black people involve a white person in the starring role, helping them. Sandra Bullock is also usually involved. It's tired.
Anonymous wrote:Ah, the Nice White Lady cinematic solution to societal problems. Yay.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It does seem to be more about Reese Witherspoon than the refugees. Erin Brokovitch was more about her character than the town people with cancer (or whatever it was).
Well, it's a big Hollywood movie, not a documentary. It's made to entertain and make money. If you want harsh reality, look elsewhere. No one is forcing you or OP to go see it, are they?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting. I hadn't heard of it before. As a white person, I see it as a movie about three brave refugees coming here to an entirely new culture. A white woman is just the person that happens to be helping them.
Same. I'm open to hearing why my view is clouded.
Anonymous wrote:It does seem to be more about Reese Witherspoon than the refugees. Erin Brokovitch was more about her character than the town people with cancer (or whatever it was).
Anonymous wrote:It does seem to be more about Reese Witherspoon than the refugees. Erin Brokovitch was more about her character than the town people with cancer (or whatever it was).