1. Order of Events: The movie started out with two French brothers named Guidden and Jules Naudet who planned on making a film a boy becoming a Man and with the help of fire fighter James Hannlon. They then picked a man named Tony who was a probe at the same station as James. The followed him around for five weeks, watching him clean dishes, wash the engines, paint tools, and make beds, nothing exciting was really happening and then on September 11th it all changed. The fire fighters that were on duty that morning responded to a call about a possibly gas leak, they saw the first plane hit the 1st tower and instantly responded to the scene. Once they arrived to Tower 1 the chief instantly talked to the authorities of the Tower and then learned that the elevators were no longer working and to get to the floor that was hit, they had to use the stairs to climb 78 flights to see what was going on. While evacuating the people that were around and coming up with a plane, more stations had come to help in any way that they could, in all this happening the second plane hit tower 2. Tony the probe was off duty that day a long with other guys but eventually they all got called in and were waiting patiently until they were given instructions on what to do.…
In the documentary “Undefeated”, a team member named Chavis was given a second chance after he got in a fight with Money, another player on the team. Before this, he was given chance after chance, yet he kept getting into trouble. After the fight, he gets a suspension from football. He is allowed back on the team after the suspension is over.…
In the Chapter One of the book “Half the Sky,” published in 2009, the authors Nicholas D. Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn mainly argue about modern sex slavery and other nations’ assistance for women education in poor countries.…
Gender equality has long been an issue all over the world. Though the issue is not that nasty in current society, problems still exist. Woman status rises a lot to a much higher-level compared to before. Feminism develops and spreads out at a rapid rate and more and more women now a day express their thoughts of being independent. Christina Larsen and Leila Ahmed both talk about the changing of women status in modern society, but in two different countries. In her essay “The Startling Plight of China’s Leftover Ladies”, Larsen points out that Chinese women now have a higher social status than compare to the past. Ahmed, in her essay “Reinventing the Veil”, also mentions that Muslin women now advocate their independent status and have much more…
This film was nominated for the Sundance Film Festival for all the right reasons. Multiple interviews provided first-hand experience of the effect media, and gender inequality (which sometimes goes unnoticed) has on women in recent years. Videos that were shown in the documentary were uncut and unedited to showcase the sometimes hidden side of the media. The writer of this documentary wanted its viewers to become enlightened about the problems we face today in our society regarding gender exploitation and…
It's a Girl! is a documentary that exposes the issue of gendercide, "the systematic elimination of a gender group, usually females" (It's a Girl! Discussion + Action Guide), particularly in India and China due to the enormous size of their population. The documentary was broken into two parts: the first explained the matter in India and the second part was in China. In India the main issue was the dowry system while in China it was the one child policy; these two issues contribute to the cause of gendercide. The film showed a great emphasis on the problem of gendercide being a strong cause of the devaluation of women in these certain societies. One important problem that is caused by this is the ratios of men to women in both countries today.…
In the movie Aliens , we see various patterns found in society. We see the gender role stereotype competitions and the motherly instinct to go to death to save a little girl. We also come across the conditioning that we have been taught for centuries ¾ that women are weak and should leave the big jobs to men. The director uses the military as a microcosm of our world. Each character plays an important role found in society. As we see each character slowly fall to pieces, we begin to distinguish what is truly beneath the surface. The movie teaches us that women do not need to be made inferior and instead of beating them down, we should help them to grow and become stronger women and individuals.…
This book is a crucial dose of reality for those of us that are spoiled by the comforts we have grown used too. Nicholas D. Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn explain in the book “Half the Sky” why empowering women in the developing world is ethically right and extremely vital.It is a gripping story of how customs and culture have historically oppressed women. The strength of the human rights movement and of actual change across all cultures is going to be asteadfast task of courageous women who give themselves permission to say no to so many years of unthinkable tyrannical cultural customs and fight for a new way of life. Many of us close our eyes to what is going on in other countries and assume there is nothing we can do to change things. But as Edmund Burke said, “All that is required for evil to prevail is for good men to do nothing.”…
Peter Travis creates a brand new look on the Movie, October Sky directed by Joe Johnston by reviewing the movie for Rolling stones in february 1999 . He discovers the movie to be very unique and refreshing from the movies directed at that period of time. He considers October sky's optimistic look on life to be way more necessary for common people than those Cynical outlooks of other movies. Traver states that the movie is based on the autobiography “The Rocket boys : A memoir “ written by Homer Hickham, who worked as an aerospace engineer for almost twenty years in NASA.…
Although, Chairman Mao and the Chinese Communist Party put forth the idea that women hold up the sky and how they should be more important, China still undermined women. Cuiqiao’s brief moment of happiness was shattered when she went home and saw her future mother-in-law. Cuiqiao was forced to marry an older man in order to have enough money to bury her mother as well as provide her brother with future endowment money for his wedding. In Jessica Fulton’s article, “Holding up Half the Heavens: The Effect of Communist Rule on China’s Women,” she explains that during the worst famines in Chinese history when peasants had to eat bark and leaves in order to live, the peasants would choose to let their daughter starve to save their sons (Fulton 36). This relates to Yellow Earth because Hanhan’s needs come before Cuiqiao’s needs. Hanhan is still a young boy and he is not going to marry anytime soon, but Cuiqiao already had to find resources for his future endowment money. Cuiqiao sings with a sad tone, “I’d like to say what is on my mind, but I don’t know how.” On the one hand, Chairman Mao says that women are important too, but on the other hand, women are still scarified. Director Chen pinpoints the ironic relationship between Cuiqiao’s role in the film and the idealization of Chinese feminism brought out through Chinese…
A retrospective understanding of an author’s context, allows us to identify and contrast between the social values apparent in their respective literature. This is evident in both Shakespeare’s 16th century play ‘Othello’ and Geoffrey Sax’s 2001 variation. Both texts explore the differences in human nature; such as revenge and discrimination in the form of gender inequality and racial prejudice and this can be seen as a reflection it its context. Since these ideas are constant throughout both texts a comparative analysis would indicate the differing values of the society of each text. Shakespeare’s Othello has been crafted for an Elizabethan audience, thus he’s given importance to a higher supernatural figure as that was the belief of their time. In comparison Sax portrays a more modern ideology such as science…
The movie October Sky deals with a lot of themes that still exist in societies all over the world today.…
Although watching this film made me sad, it made me realize what your body and mind can and will do to survive any situation. The body and minds of humans are so amazing that when they are put in these life or death situations, they will willing to survive with anything. On October 1972, Flight 52 went down in the Andes. On this plane was a Rugby team along with peers and family members. They knew that if they were gonna survive they needed warmth. They quickly dug through what was remaining of the luggage and started making things and keeping warm with what clothing they had. What they also had to preserve was what chocolate they found in the suitcases.…
Women everyday, all over the world are being held against their will. Many of these women are bought, sold, and used for sex or labor. In the book Half the Sky by Nicholas D. Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn they focus on the prevention of sex trafficking by giving shocking statistics and first hand accounts of gruesome situations women have been through (Kristof). Sex trafficking is often seen as a non-issue because women often give consent to the sex after being involved for a long period of time. Because brothel owners are harsh and unsympathetic, women are left powerless and defenseless. Even after being rescued from brothels, women need rehabilitation in order to live a productive, successful life because they are brainwashed and drugged, have nowhere to go, and acquire no skills to maintain a normal job.…
The reality of women’s life remains invisible to men and women alike and this invisibility persists at all levels beginning with the family to the nation. The more fact that “women hold up half the sky”- does not appear to give them a position of dignity and equality.…