Short review on the movie and the violence within it. hapless little piece, its not too bad, i felt warm done by the mark.
American history X
The film tries to deal with amicable issues as honestly as possible.Racism is a serious problem. racial organizations like the one depicted in the film go in seriously large numbers.People get caught up in racial hatred. Violence results.And, yes, people do change.But its that last peak that concerns me.All of the characterizations seem distanced and one-sided.As most filmmakers do, director Tony Kaye and writer David McKenna stack the ornament to make their case.We get a pretty good conceit of why Derek becomes so enraged against blacks.We are shown that his father was racialist to begin with, and a fathers violent death could be the crook point for any impressionable youth.But for a man so steeped in hatred as Derek is, could a few old age in prison, where he experiences fellow whites betraying one another and a black man befriending him, change him so radically that he sharply requires no more part of racism? Its an soaring sentiment and probably such drastic turnabouts do occur, entirely I wasnt convinced by the films portrayal of it.Additionally, like Dereks sudden change of heart, many of the other characters are presented as plainly all good or all bad.Dr.
Sweeny, the school capitulum played by Avery Brooks, is all good--a black man of faultless courage and conviction.The younger brother is all bad, totally sink in Alexanders movement.Murray, Dereks mothers boyfriend played by Elliott Gould, is all good--a hokey Jewish liberal who says entirely the right things but has no backbone to pursue them. And, of course, Alexander is all bad--bad to the quick, evil incarnate.This makes for sinewy dramatic action, but it doesnt necessarily add up to realistic...
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