329:question:329--week_12_questions_comments-2018
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329:question:329--week_12_questions_comments-2018 [2018/11/15 08:37] – [The movie as a primary source of its time] 76.78.226.146 | 329:question:329--week_12_questions_comments-2018 [2018/11/15 08:54] (current) – [The "So, what?" question] 76.78.226.146 | ||
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"The Long Walk Home" does a great job to really develop these two families in the film. It allowed for audiences to see that women like Odessa were individuals with dreams and worries, that she was more than an abstract character representing a cause. The movie conveys the Montgomery Bus Boycott on a raw, emotionally personal level. The filmmakers presented this story in human terms, not in social terms. -Amiti Colson | "The Long Walk Home" does a great job to really develop these two families in the film. It allowed for audiences to see that women like Odessa were individuals with dreams and worries, that she was more than an abstract character representing a cause. The movie conveys the Montgomery Bus Boycott on a raw, emotionally personal level. The filmmakers presented this story in human terms, not in social terms. -Amiti Colson | ||
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+ | I think that the filmmakers wanted their audience to perceive the Montgomery Bus Boycott in a more real way than they had learned about it in. I think they did a good job of making what the activists involved in the boycott went through feel real to an audience of people who may not themselves have experienced discrimination. - Sam Hartz |
329/question/329--week_12_questions_comments-2018.1542271021.txt.gz · Last modified: 2018/11/15 08:37 by 76.78.226.146