race, gender

Carter 2022-04-20 09:01:58

It's a movie that makes people feel warm. Although the plot is cliché, the movie is adapted from a real story, which makes people feel warm and warm. After all, we all like happy endings in life, but it makes me pay more attention. The story is about the divorce between the female teacher and her husband. I saw some comments and thought it was bloody, but I think this is a reflection of that era. I can pursue my life, but why can't you support my dreams?

The heroine's husband's ideal is to be an architect. Due to various practical reasons, he does not have the courage to pursue his own ideals, but the heroine is just the opposite. Although both her husband and father are against him to become a teacher in this school, he is still reckless. Being invested in a career that I love and doing it well, I think that makes the heroine's husband feel a little unbalanced, and that's the root cause of their divorce.

The female lead does not ask her husband to support her, but only asks her husband to understand her, but he cannot do this. Isn't this a manifestation of inequality between men and women? In the middle of a dialogue, I was very impressed. The heroine said to her husband: I also hope that sometimes you can support my career, but her husband said: I'm not your wife, I wanted to laugh when I saw it, this The world not only exists, but racial discrimination, inequality between men and women, and ideas are deeply rooted in the hearts of the people.

The heroine not only breaks down the barriers between races, but also the status quo of inequality between men and women

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Extended Reading
  • Timmy 2022-03-27 09:01:12

    How much we don't know

  • Guiseppe 2022-01-01 08:02:43

    reminds of me of my high school

Freedom Writers quotes

  • [following Erin's impassioned speech about the Nazi Holocaust]

    Tito: [raises hand] What's a holocaust?

    Erin Gruwell: Who here knows what the Holocaust is?

    [all keep their hands down except Ben, the only white kid, who sheepishly raises his]

    Erin Gruwell: Who here has ever been shot at?

    [all raise their hands except Ben, who lowers his]

  • Andre: She can't even look at me because I look like my dad.