The film is about a lot of binary files, wrapped in Confederate flags, hanging moss and "Whites Only" signs. Nothing is more subtle in this film, as if the director has taken a page for Tyler Perry Film. Judging from the laughter I was in the balcony, I would say it was a success. White women, particularly odious house fans injured Bryce Howard, ruthless is the only one interested in maintaining their lifestyle and keep the black for them. Black women are just as accessories for them to perpetrate their evil - or comforters, as holders of white infants, such as chicken fryers impertinent. "Fried chicken you tend to feel better about life," said Minny spirit, played by Octavia Spencer, who comforts her employer, Celia, after a recent miscarriage.
Remember that poor old Potty time called the 1960s when South America was racist, but it all ended, with a white woman writing about black maids in Mississippi? Apparently this is the premise of the film version of "Aid ..."
jokes are prevalent in this film - the attempt to toilet train Aibileen toddler Elizabeth Mae Mobley who Hilly mission to get all the white households to build toilets for staff as bakery Minoune shit in a chocolate cake and serve to rolling. I had no idea of the aid was a comedy. Many times I feel uncomfortable in my seat, when the largely black audience that booed should be a look to reflect on the sometimes tense relationship between black women and white. I am not a grumpy. I laughed for a few scenes, but it felt more like I was laughing to keep from crying. "
Skeeter Phelan (Emma Stone), a recent graduate of beautiful misfits of the University, wrote the council to clean up the column of your local newspaper. She can not understand why Constantine (Cicely Tyson), good family meal, was abandoned. Charlotte (Allison Janney), Skeeter's mother ill, offering false excuses.
The relationship between Skeeter and Constantine was clearly closer than Skeeter bond with his mother. Among other things, "aid" is the intense emotional connection between white children and black servants who raised them. Both children and adults with their own children to travel, often with their servants, contempt.
Aibileen Clark (Viola Davis) has brought 17 children White Jackson, during which he lost his son. Much more sensitive to racial disadvantage as it seems, the other white woman in Jackson, Skeeter Aibileen gently persuaded to tell the story in the book, he intends to write, then that includes stories of other local girls. (A little 'too much, of course, get a taste of Skeeter shelf, including "To Kill a Mockingbird" and "Native Son").
The writer-director Taylor Tate, a childhood friend of Jackson Stockett, with only one prior film to his credit, the positions and Skeeter Aibileen twice the hero of the piece. In fact, it is the third - the best friend of Aibileen Minoune Jackson (Octavia Spencer), a servant who has difficulty fools - an occupational hazard, to say the least.