Wednesday, March 21, 2007

No one makes it alone...


Based on a true story, Sherrybaby is an emotional independent film written and directed by Laurie Collyer. Actress Maggie Gyllenhaal plays a young strung out single mom who recently just got out of prison named Sherry Swanson. Gyllenhaal really hooks you in with the beaming personality and knock out body yet self-destructive personality. She was put in prison for three years because of her addiction to drugs that lead her to steal anything in order to get a fix. One of her challengers is proving to her parole officer that she can stay clean and keep a stable job. The first thing she wants to do when she gets out is to be re-united with her daughter, Alexis. Sherry starts by moving into a half way house with hopes to start a new and better life. Her readjustment to the real world proves to be anything but smooth. She falls back into her old ways by having sex with a man who runs the recovery program, and telling a man at a job interview, “I’ll suck your dick if you give me the job I want”. Sherry’s five-year-old daughter has been taken care of by her brother, Bobby, and his wife, Lynette, whom are rightfully protective of Alexia because of Sherry being back around. When she sees her daughter for the first time in years, the emotion that Gyllenhaal brings to the scene makes you want to see them be together. Still in the back of your mind you know that this would be a disaster because Sherry can barley take care of herself, let alone another human being. Sherry immediately suffocates her daughter with gifts and affection to make up for lost time. Lynette is extremely attached to Alexis and is very cautious of Sherry being back. This puts Bobby is an awkward position between his wife and his sister. Gyllenhaal does an amazing job at making you believe in her love for her daughter. She has an emotional breakdown because her daughter does not call her “Mommy” anymore, and I felt the pain right along with Sherry. This is a story about how she struggles to earn the right to be in her daughter’s life. Many people try to save Sherry including her amazing brother and a friend she met at a recovery meeting, but no one can save Sherry but herself. Sherrybaby is a riveting tale of personal failings and recovery, which I believe establishes Gyllenhaal as one of the best actresses of her generation. I would recommend this movie to anyone who feels that they can handle the drama and depressiveness the movie portals. I would definitely rate this movie five stars, as I feel it deserves it.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Moving at the speed of life we are bound to collide with each other.


A reflection on the overlooked events of racism in everyday life in Los Angeles California, Crash can draw in large audiences because of the diverseness in actors and actresses and the emotional appeal that the movie provides. This movie can lead you to reflect on yourself and others while doing some serious soul searching.

Crash was released in 2005 and directed by Paul Haggis. If you don’t know him from his work with Crash then you may know him from the movie Million Dollar Baby. Crash won three Oscars, which included Best Achievement in Editing, Best Motion Picture of the Year, and Best Writing, Original Screenplay. Haggis directs the film with up close shots that make you feel as if you know the characters personally, like you are living the scene with them.

The movie starts and ends at the same place, with a car crash. It then tells what happened in the thirty-six hours in between. The characters do not know each other personally but yet they are interconnected in many ways. There are many collisions that happen between the characters of different races and economic backgrounds. The story is told by each one of these individuals and you get to see how unique each situation is. There is a detective who has a drugged mother and has a thieving younger brother. The brother and his other thieving friend are constantly theorizing on racism. There is a white attorney and his wife who makes it no secret that she hates people not like her. There is a racist white cop who also cares for his sick father at home. This cop has a younger partner who watches him molest a successful director’s wife and can do nothing about it. Lastly there is a Persian man who buys a gun to protect his shop and family who then encounters a Hispanic locksmith and his young daughter.

My favorite quote is one of the first lines from the movie, “It's the sense of touch. In any real city you walk, you know? You brush past people. People bump into you. In L.A., nobody touches you. We're always behind this metal and glass. I think we miss that touch so much, that we crash into each other, just so we can feel something.” This really does explain big cities in The United States. People walk by other people everyday. Maybe these people really do miss being touched, so they crash into people just to feel something.

I would recommend this movie to anyone and everyone. I think it is a must see because it really opens your eyes and teaches you a valuable lesson about racism, discrimination and stereotypes. I urge you to see this movie and watch it with an open mind and learn something about yourself. It shows that all of us, no matter what race we are, we all have stereotypes and we sometimes cannot hide that fact. I would give it two thumbs up!

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Ever Heard Of Philo T. Farnsworth???


Philo T. Farnsworth was a Mormon farm boy who just happened to invent the electronic television. He has transformed what we see as media today. Unfortunately he is not a well-known figure in American history like Alexander Graham Bell and Thomas Edison. You will not find his name in any history book, but instead will find Vladimir Zvorykin’s name. Why is this?

At the young age of twenty Philo was creating the television with financial support from local businessmen. Ironically, Vladimir who worked for RCA was also trying to create the television at the same time. When applying the dominant and subordinate groups to this example, it is obvious who was which. Farnsworth was the subordinate because he was part of the white lower class and therefore had no wealth or power. RCA was part of the dominant group because they were a major corporation that included money and power. RCA had so much power that they sent someone to copy the blueprints of Farnsworth’s work. Farnsworth beat RCA against the odds and got a patent for his electronic television. RCA, using their money offered him 100,000 dollars for the patent, but he refused. RCA couldn’t handle the idea of a small town poor man getting credit for the television, so they lied cheated and stole to try to get the claim. Yet, Vladimir is the one who is remembered for the invention. This is because they put a ban on commercial television and his patent would run out and television production would become public. The dominant group eventually destroyed Farnsworth by him suffering from depression and alcoholism because of the stress they imposed on him.

This story proves why the dominant (powerful and wealthy) group always comes out on top no matter how hard the subordinate fights. It also answers the question of why Vladimir goes down in the books as the one who invented the television, because history is written by the powerful. We see this kind of story repeatedly throughout history; the “little” man always loses to the “big” company.