The Help by Maud, Jonas and Lou-Anne
Storyline
In the early 60’s, a young white lady from Jackson,
Mississippi, named Skeeter wants to denounce the inequalities between the
whites and the blacks. In order to reach her goal, she decides to write a book
based on black maids’ testimonies. All along the film she gathers their stories
through which the difficulties to live in a world full of racism are exposed.
Firstly she asks her friends’ maids to be a part of her project. One of those
maids, Aibileen, managed to convince other black women to tell the horror their
bosses inflict them. Simultaneously the movie shows the parallel of the
rich white women’s idyllic lives and disastrous lives of the blacks.
Review
The spectator is the witness of what is happening in
the early 60’s in southern America. The movie provides the spectator with two
perspectives: first based on the rich white women’s point of view and then on
the black maids’. It allows the viewer to get an idea of the situation and it
suggests him to denounce racism. Moreover there are plenty of characters with
different personalities which add deepness to the movie. This movie shows the
caricatured picture of white women in those times, especially with Miss Hilly's
character which denigrate the blacks openly.
Description of a scene
In the middle of the movie, Skeeter
asks Aibeleen to gather several maids to collect as testimonies as possible.
First she refuses the request but after thinking about it and because of the
arrest of a friend of her she manages to make the maids come to Aibeleen’s
house to give Skeeter all the stories she needs. The scene marks a turning
point in the plot, showing the solidarity between blacks and whites. This
breaks the borders brought by racism and it brings the hope to see a better
future based on social mix and equality.

it's a quite short and boring
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