During two class sessions, we have viewed the movie Crash. In this particular movie, victims and offenders are shown to be victims of racism and end up being shown as a racist under different circumstances. This shows various characters of different backgrounds and ethnicities going through a certain roadblock in their lives due to a personal matter that may be because of a racial thought.…
The movie Crash is a very interesting and compelling movie that showed some social problems like racism and stereotypes that occur in everyday life. The movie starts off a day later from the present when a Det. Graham Waters is at a scene of a crime and just got a look at the victim which happen to be his own brother (revealed at the end of the movie). The movie then goes on to follow a variety of characters such as Det. Graham Waters, Sgt. John Ryan, Ria (Det. Waters’ partner), D.A. Rick Cabot and his wife Jean, Cameron Thayer a Hollywood director and his wife Christine, Anthony who steals cars with his friend Peter (who is Det. Waters’ brother), a Persian family, a Hispanic family, and officer Tom Hansen. The film goes on to show the experiences of racism and stereotypes these people endure over a two day period. The movie was very exciting and showed some social problems that still happen today. It went deep into the context of how people still…
The movie Crash, written and directed by Paul Haggins, shows many forms of diversity, stereotyping and racism. Each race is represented throughout the movie and blatantly displays racial discrimination and ethnocentrism.…
The film, ’Crash’, is about how Paul Haggis forces us to see other people's perspective through racially prejudiced actions. Racism is the belief of different cultures, this is usually to do with one person who thinks their own race is superior and have the right to dominate or to rule others. Historical racism is where there were no rules when discriminating other peoples races and had no consequences for their actions, most of the time the outcome comes to physical abuse and even death. Modern racism is like historical racism but does not resort into physical attacks because there is the change in racial abuse in society and people are trying to promote the good.…
The movie Crash interweaves the lives of multiple people, who have been stereotyped by one another in the worst ways possible to show us that many real-life problems stem from the fear people have towards one another. It puts into prospect how many people make racially charged comments and expect no retribution to their comments or actions. In the movie, Jean Cabot and her husband get carjacked by a couple of African American men who Jean had been fearful of earlier in the day. When they get home, she sees the locksmith at her house and implies because of his tattoos he will be doing something illegal. Tattoos have had an implication of bad intentions in the past.…
The movie crash is a combination of many different things including labeling theory. Crash is not just a movie about car crashes, but also of cultures and values. There are several intertwined lives and personal relationships with a common point of prejudice involving ethnic issues.…
In the film “Crash”, there were repeated examples of prejudice and discrimination displayed by a variety of characters. While considering the film in concepts set out in our assigned reading of chapter 11 - Race and Ethnicity (Macionis, 304-333) several areas we had covered were clearly evident. I decided to focus on the prejudice and discrimination displayed toward blacks and Hispanics in the film. The first example that struck me was the common theme of stereotyping based on race and ethnicity. The first example from the film that conveyed stereotyping to me was the conversation of the two black car thieves as they walked out of the restaurant and down the street. One of the thieves is complaining about the service they received in the restaurant when the other points out that their server was black. The first thief counters with the argument that their…
The movie “Crash” is a stuck-to-your-seat thriller with true meaning. It is easy to see why is has been so successful and garnered so many awards. The viewer is witness to a great cast with several intertwining story lines that centralize around the common stereotypes of many races that plague our society today. We see several important characters that tell the story through several dynamic perspectives that are detrimental to understanding the film, as well as to the understanding of how we can get past these stereotypes and misconceptions in order to not just better our society as a whole, but better our businesses and employees in entirety.…
Crash is a movie about racial stereotypes that people believe in, and how they let them influence the way they see people. The stereotypes lead the characters to have prejudices about certain people in the movie. Every race is guilty of having prejudiced beliefs about some other race in the movie, and all the characters of al different races are somehow interconnected with each other. The point of the film is to show that people shouldn’t believe ever stereotype they are told, and consider the possibility that all people of the same race are alike. There are different types of people in every race, whether that means good or bad people, or smart or dumb people. There are no personality traits that every person of a race has.…
The events depicted in Crash suggest that racial stereotypes are only accurate characterizations of certain individuals. To use such generalizations to define an entire group is ignorant and sometimes hateful. The characters of Crash are given opportunities to change their thinking.…
For decades, American films have had certain type of influences on people criteria by creating and giving them messages that can manipulate their attitudes and opinions. One of the main ones that have been displayed in American films is stereotyping of different races. In the movie Crash, stereotyping is portrayed as classifying different type of ethnic groups. Minorities remain underrepresented in mainstream media and they are usually asked to play roles such as people with low economic resources, immigrants and criminals. Meanwhile, white Americans play the role of high class, polite, and proper.…
Crash. It is the perfect analogy of how we as a human race deal with life, people and our own experiences. Physical characteristics and racial differences may be interpreted as two distinguishing traits that separate us. I think it’s what keeps us apart. That leaves several abstract questions that the film Crash illustrates. What are the origins of personal prejudice? Do individual experiences fuel standing stereotypes? Is it easier to perpetuate existing stereotypes because “things will never change?” Can people battle internal struggles within their own ethnic group? What prohibits us from overcoming these prejudices? The writers of the Crash managed to extend my viewing experience beyond the 90 minute film, thus forcing me to analyze my own prejudices and racial stereotypes towards others.…
Because the characters in “Crash” portrayed a variety of ethnicities, the movie attempts to address the diversity represented in the American landscape and also the stereotypes connected to these ethnicities. There was the stereotype of the white female victim, played by Sandra Bullock. After already displaying her prejudice against African American males by holding her purse tighter and grabbing on to her husband’s arm when she encountered two of them in the streets of her neighborhood; she coincidentally was car-jacked by the same young men. The stereotypes portrayed were that of the white woman who is always in danger and needs to be protected and that all African American males are thugs and criminals. The female victim was the stereotypical, upper/ upper middle class white woman, whose friends look like herself and her only contact with people of other races was the help she has hired to do her housework. Her anger from the carjacking incident caused her to become more overt in her prejudice as she expressed her feelings about the Latino locksmith being a possible gang member and selling copies of her home key so that his friends could return to burglarize their home.…
The film Crash by director Paul Haggis addresses the presence of racism and prejudice that still exists in our society. Over the course of 36 hours in Los Angeles, a diverse group of people’s lives begin to intertwine as they are forced to face certain misconceptions they may have about other races and cultures. The film contains several powerful moments that force the characters to “crash” into each other and truly confront their own beliefs and opinions. Four cultural theories, which include stereotypes, prejudice, individualistic and collectivistic cultures, and culture shock can be seen throughout the film. The use of these cultural theories in the film helps to emphasize the diversity that it seen in society and how these theories, such…
Now my reaction to this film was at first shocked and in awe of the brutality of the first 30 minutes. Such as Anthony and Peter’s discussion in the first few minutes about the white persons being afraid of the black, even if they were the only two in the surroundings and yet they stole the car, proving the hypocritical nature of the film. Granted, this film is filled with racist remarks and yet somehow, none of this is relevant to me at this current time, it might just be that I’ve been prejudiced in any way after moving around. Yet, I still do believe that Crash is incredibly hyperbolic about the racism in the time after 9/11.…