Havoc Analysis Essay

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Justice: a Masquerade for the Unjust
Paradoxical Emily, one of the protagonists of the film, Havoc (2005) takes on the role of a wealthy teenage girl who runs into a Hispanic gang in East Los Angeles. Driven by a craving for attention she seeks contentment through her integration into the gang. However, the clash of the two social classes hinders Emily’s complete merge. The film’s central conflict revolves around the treatment Emily and the other members of the wealthy community she lives in receive in comparison to how those who live in the poor community presented in the movie receive. Havoc exposes the inefficiency of the United States’ criminal justice system that generates a dichotomy in which justice discriminates the poor by silencing their opinions and favors the rich by prioritizing their needs.
In Havoc, Emily, a fair skin blond hair girl from a wealthy community engages in sexual activity with a Hispanic gang member dressed in an oversized white muscle shirt, dark baggy jeans, and a bandana around his neck. His body is covered in tattoos and he speaks in a colloquial manner. After being shown sobbing on her mother’s shoulder with her …show more content…

In “Working Class Whites” Angeline F. Price quotes Fussel saying, “[o]ne class gets the sugar and the other gets the shit” (Fussel, 25). Later Price responds, “in American society the ‘other’ is invariably poverty stricken and powerless” (Price 648). That is to say that the comfort of the rich is at cost of the discomfort of the poor. Correspondingly, wealth or the lack of, have been associated with a complex of superiority versus inferiority. Therefore, one is treated according to the amount of wealth one has accumulated. Such ideology was created by the rich through the widespread rhetoric of separation based on socioeconomic factors. This separation has benefited the upper class, and hurt the lower class especially when it pertains to the

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