The Help, directed by Tate Taylor (released on December 6, 2011) |
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The vast divide between blacks and whites in Mississippi, in spite of the inter-reliance of the two groups, is vividly drawn, in a way that connects the novel and its film adaptation, as Ralph Eubanks pointed out, to the world described in the short stories of Eudora Welty and other writers. In particular, the intertwining of families, especially the bonds between white children and the black maids who raise them, is appreciated in all its complexity. Unfortunately, in the last 30 or 40 minutes the film loses its way, turning from a serious examination of race issues into a parody of the south à la Steel Magnolias, Fried Green Tomatoes, or Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil. A gross tale of revenge takes on far too much importance, played up grotesquely for its humorous excess, and ultimately it seems far too easy (and, at worst, disrespectful and trivializing) to assume that generations of racial injustice -- and the real and terrifying threat against any action to change it -- have vanished because of the publication of one slender book.
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