Tuesday, February 14, 2012

"Black Girl" review by Brysen Uhalde & Michael Tunes

                                                           BLACK GIRL




            Diouana, a young black girl moves to France under the house of her employer Madam Monsieur. She was tricked into coming by the false promise to be a care taker of the children, but when she arrives she finds no children and is ordered to cook and clean, living in an environment away from home being treated as a slave.
            Diouana revolts and stops cleaning and eating and eventually she performs and unthinkable action. That catches everyone off guard.
            “Black Girl” shows how fragile a human can be lost in their own mind with no communication, away from everyone and everything they know. How depression can seep in and affect you. It makes you ponder about the human condition and given the situation, how would someone act or cease to act.
            The ambitions of the film “Black Girl” was striving to make a piece to show how evil a person can be and how sensitive another can be pushed towards depression.


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