I used to see discrimination and contempt for black people from time to time in American movies. At that time, I thought these racists were really narrow and evil villains. Later, I watched a lot of movies, and quite a few of them were about racial themes. The original intention was to understand racial discrimination. The reason, the result is that I have also become a "villain" who discriminates against black people
The best film of the 91st Oscar, "Green Book", is the most well-known racial film in recent years, but in fact the film is just a reflection on self-identity in the context of racial discrimination. I think the producer Such a film was made only to gain the advantage of political correctness. How can the friendship between the male protagonist and the black musician in the film mean that the male protagonist is no longer a racist? He met a black man of noble character, does that mean that all black people are noble? The original intention of this film was to win the award. It did not talk about the reasons why black people were discriminated against. The plot was timid for fear of touching a minefield. A few years ago, "Crash" described the issue of racial discrimination even more. Going deeper and more real, this kind of film is what a racial film should look like
Next is my subjective racist remark time:
The black population accounts for 13% of the US population, and the crime rate is as high as 55%. This fact alone is enough to put black people into the lowest level of discrimination. Some movies are happy to portray them as being bullied. The silent image of black slaves in the last century, but in fact, they formed gangs and continued to do criminal activities. They opened their mouths to how much those white people looked down on black people.
(Then eliminating racism became politically correct, don’t believe it, look at how many racial themes are in the best picture Oscar, sneer)
Just like in this film, because there are no black stars on the wall of the pizza shop, it ended up burning down the restaurant. The boss said that the stars on the wall are all Italian-Americans. After all, the boss is Italian, but the black man still refuses to obey. I have to put up a picture of a black man. You can see at a glance who is right and who is wrong. As a group that is oppressed, black people have a collective sense and distorted sense of "someone bullies black people and we want to avenge him". The sense of justice, the thief shouted to catch the thief, swarmed up and destroyed the innocent shop, and when the fire was set, their inner sense of justice must have reached the peak "Damn white people, this is the end of you bullying us for no reason"
I also wonder why this black director used a racial film to make a film that made the audience hate black people even more. It turned out that the director left what he was trying to say in the text at the end of the film. I don't know if the black brothers watched this movie How will the movie feel? Anyway, I think this way of expression is the most powerful and shocking, but I guess they will only say "fuxk it he's white!"
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