The Help Movie

626 Words2 Pages

The Help was a movie about the struggles that black women had as maids working for white families in 1960s Mississippi. Their struggles recorded by a young southern white woman by the name of Skeeter. Gaining the aid of Aibileen Clark who, though reluctant at first, was the first to retell her experiences. The domino effect starting off with the arrest of Yule May Davis--a fellow maid. I was not disappointed in how this movie was executed. It focused well on what they needed to and even threw in a little more about the world around them during the time. The way people acted toward one another felt natural, especially between the two opposing forces. What really grabbed my attention during the movie was the interactions between Aibileen and Elizabeth Leefolt's daughter. The two were incredibly close, more so, than the little girl was with her own mother. It was obvious in the way Aibileen encouraged the girl with the mantra, …show more content…

It just did not make sense. To be disgusted that someone else of a different skin color was using the toilet, when this same person was cleaning the house. Not only did the maids do the cleaning, but they also made the food and raised the children. How is using the toilet any worse than touching the very food that would be going into your mouth? It sounded like an excuse to make life harder for the maids. While this movie was about recording these women's stories and compiling them into a book, it was actually illegal in Mississippi to write about blacks. Fortunately, it was not the case in the city as an editor was very interested in getting the book published. Now a days we have all sorts of stories and movies with black men and women, so to think that it was illegal to even write about blacks sounds so absurd, yet it was so horribly true in the 60s. I do not know how an entire group of people could be treated so badly when they were the ones doing so much for

Open Document