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Rashid Irani's review: The Help

Just when we thought that social issues had been shot dead and buried by Hollywood — overdosing on 3D and heist flicks — there comes The Help which once again takes up cudgels against racism.

Updated on: Feb 18, 2012 07:30 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By , Mumbai
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The Help
Direction: Tate Taylor
Cast: Viola Davis, Emma Stone
Rating: ***1/2

HT Image
HT Image

Just when we thought that social issues had been shot dead and buried by Hollywood — overdosing on 3D and heist flicks — there comes The Help which once again takes up cudgels against racism.

The Oscar-winning Crash (2004) was a strong indictment of the still-prevalent prejudice. Director Taylor’s film, however, returns to the early 1960s when blacks in the Deep South were being oppressed as if they were ‘slaves’ of the whites. It’s a theme which has been deftly narrated in The Colour Purple, Mississippi Burning and A Time to Kill.

Adapted from a brisk-selling novel by Kathryn Stockett, the plot mainly revolves around a liberal writer (Stone) who sets out to chronicle the lives of two African-American maids (Davis-Octavia Spencer). The ‘helps’ reluctantly agree to tell all on the condition of anonymity. The film is remarkable for the ensemble of believably polarised characters it creates. If a white woman insists on a separate toilet for a woman ‘beneath’ her status, one of the helps gets her comeuppance by adding her excreta to the chocolate pie baked for the lady.

Her performance, alone, is worth a walk to the nearest multiplex.

 
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