We can interpret this movie through a societal lens. When we do this we can read the director's message about the dangers of xenophobia. The film when viewed this way makes the audience take a step back and think about how they and their society treats refugees. This film takes real world refugee issues and puts them at the forefront of the readers view. In Children of Men refugees have all their value as humans taken away from them. They are herded up and put in cages, we see this in the scenes where Theo walks around inner london, and then shipped off to places where they don't have to be dealt with by the wealthy british population. This is a very similar situation as what is happening in the real world. When the audience sees this mass …show more content…
In Children Of Men Wealthy non-refugees are shown living in relative luxury while refugees are treated like animals. Kee is a fugee (the populace of Children of Mens name for refugees). Because of this she is often overlooked and maltreated, this means that her pregnancy goes unnoticed. In a world where everyone has been infertile for 18 years this is big news. This acts as a warning, in society people of value are being ignored because of their refugee status. This makes the viewer think about this kind of situation in the real world. In the real world being labeled as a refugee over shadows your intelligence and skills, leading many refugee’s potential to be wasted. The viewer relates Kee’s situation back to the situation of a real life refugee, how many of the world's biggest problems could have been solved by a refugee who was simply overlooked based on this status? By showing the audience a variety of negative societal interactions with refugees in Children of Men, Alfonso Cuaron has made people question their own society's views and actions towards refugees. By thrusting these issues right into view Alfonso has removed the option to hide and ignore the refugee
The article, “Refugees: Who, Where, and Why” by Catherine Gevert is about different refugees in the world, where they are from and why they became refugees in the first place. The first concept the author talked about was, around the world, many refugees have had to flee, to escape to safety after being mistreated in their own country. Refugees are protected by law and given basic civil rights when going to different countries. Another key point she talks about is where these people are and in the article shows us that refugee camps are located throughout the world, but are not the best living conditions. Many refugees go here for asylum. Furthermore, some reasons people can become refugees are because of, war and “ethnic cleansing”, also known
When relocating to a new country, a refugee must get used to a new culture while suppressing their own. Not to mention, they have to live knowing that they left their family and friends behind in a dangerous environment. They are stuck with the burden of not knowing whether or not their relatives are still alive. Having to live day after day with these weights on your shoulder would be a detriment to anyone’s emotional health. In the documentary, God Grew Tired of Us, John Dau, a Syrian refugee came to America where he was able to live in an apartment, get a job, and receive an education. He went from living outdoors with no idea of what tomorrow will bring, to living in an air conditioned apartment with a chance to build a future, yet Dau still wasn’t happy. He found himself missing his homeland and the friends and family he had left behind. Refugees face a multitude of emotional stress when starting their new lives, everything has changed for them and sometimes it can be too much to handle. Knowing they left vulnerable loved ones behind, while they get to start anew can make it hard to enjoy their chance at happiness. Along with the distress that comes with being on your own, the different customs and societal values can be difficult on a refugee. They may need to abandon old traditions or even hide a part of their identity that wouldn’t be seen as “normal” in their new location. A constant sense of loneliness along with living in a new area where you don’t quite fit in can be emotionally stressful for
Go Back To Where You Came From is an Australian documentary/reality show in which participants are given the opportunity to experience what the life of refugee and asylum seeker can be like, albeit edited and packaged for an audience. During the course of the three hour long series, the six individuals not only have the chance to get under the skin of a refugee in terms of achieving a greater degree of insight into what being a refugee really means, but also to get on the viewing audiences nerves in perhaps all or any of the of the first three senses described above. Moreover the refugees participating in the series may ‘get under the skin’ of the programme participants and the
Similarily examined in GBTWYCF, the participant’s genuine “refugee experience” allows them to identify social understanding about the fact of other people’s lifestyles and how they withstand the most severe of individual adversities. An extensive structure taken of Raye weeping followed by a remote taken of the moon enhances her concern towards Maisara “I’ve had issues holding child birth through…I do know where she’s arriving from…” examines how by your same circumstances as others, people are able to empathise.
The film then introduces the avenues for people, refugees or otherwise, to make an application for immigration to Canada. Scenes at an airport demonstrate the humiliation of political refugees who claim asylum upon arriving in Canada, immediately having to explain their illegitimate documents and the threat to their lives in their home country. They’re ushered to another room to be photographed with a number.
First, the irony of the hopeful falsehoods that the refugees harbor creates a tone of negation and desperation. The refugees flock to California, including the Joads. The family listens to tales of poverty on a grand scale and of children “puffed out an’ jus’ skin,” but they continue to cling to the hope that they will prosper. (210) Multiple individuals caution the family about the foolish nature of their journey and
Many people are not used to refugees, so they think badly of them. Most of the refugees encounter racism and have to deal with insensitive comments. In the book Ha encountered this kind of behavior when she went to school. Some of them try to learn different languages and other customs that the local people do. Many refugees have to find some way to support themselves and their families, so they get jobs or make things to earn money. Almost all of the refugees miss their homes and want to return, but with all of the wars and fighting going on it is nearly impossible.
Drake points out that the struggle of cultural identity that caused by both external and internal factors happen to main characters as well as side characters in the films. And the temptation to cultural assimilation also leads to the struggle of maintaining family relationship, because protagonists in both films have to make choices between family and progress in cultural accommodation. Another important issue related to undocumented immigrants in both films, according to the author, is discrimination, specifically gender discrimination and discrimination towards undocumented
This movie tells stories of millions of Mexican people illegally immigrate to the United States. They leave their family behind in Mexico and in the hopes they can find a better life. They face challenges and obstacles as an illegal immigrates, such as poor paying jobs, legal rights, and a constant fear of getting caught and deportation.
This essay is about the universal refugee experience and the hardships that they have to go through on their journey. Ha from Inside Out and Back Again and other refugees from the article “Children of War” all struggle with the unsettling feeling of being inside out because they no longer own the things that mean the most to them. Ha and the other refugees all encounter similar curiosities of overcoming the finding of that back again peaceful consciousness in the “new world” that they are living in .
Many refugees have a hard time adjusting to their new culture because they are not accepted by their peers and community. First of all, in the article “Children of War”, the author states, “Sometimes I wished I’d stayed there, watching the war, rather than being here, safe, but without
Every individual will undergo many journeys throughout their lifetime - without journeys, they would be limited in experience and knowledge, and this is highlighted in many examples of media and literature. The nature of journeys also have an impact on the individual; the journey may be harsh, stressful or confusing. Anh Do’s The Happiest Refugee (2010) and Peter Skrzynecki's Migrant Hostel (1975) are two texts that convey the transformative, unstable, segregative and communicative nature of journeys.
In today’s society where most of us are sheltered physically and emotionally, have we ever stopped to think about the unfortunate ones who have been forced to live their lives differently? We are often carried away with basking in our riches that we forget to take a moment to think for those who aren’t as lucky as us. What else can we call those who have nowhere to go and nothing to do— no place to call home, no job to call an occupation, no purpose to speak of? With more people being forced out of their homelands to seek greener grass on the other side, refugee rates are on a constant rise.
He covers how the camera work and history help build and reinforce the themes in Children of Men (2006), directed by Alfonso Cuarón. His article opens by stating the importance of Theo’s relatively calm reaction to the violent bombing that takes place. This leads to my argument on the influence that refugees and immigrants’ play in the film, as well silently referencing the tragic to 9/11 bombing. The frequent reference to them throughout the movie; being killed and violently contained behind fences and held in cages, address the familiarity of the worldwide “problem” of immigration. The fear of immigrants in “the name of national security,” is also evident in the film; even showing a Homeland Security banner later in the film. In the period of this movie, violence is not only enforced and upheld, it’s ignored. Alfanso’s analysis brought up character development, specifically Theo’s dependence, which I had not even considered prior to this reading. In the beginning of the film he appears socially detached; faking sympathy to the news of Baby Diego’s death with his coworkers- in an attempt to hide his distaste of the government. Julian’s death and finding out about Kee’s pregnancy forces him to become a leader. He acts as a selfless protagonist that develops throughout the film, and may symbolize the change within the government. Overall, Alfanso’s analyzation of Children of Men is very
This film was shown to me by Sharleen Davids, whom as a Primary School teacher at Darlington Primary, it was made compulsory viewing. By means of assisting with teachers’ understanding of the circumstances of an asylum seeker. In essence, this film was beneficial; especially as a great proportion of the students at her primary school are refugees. Respectively, the film was produced by refugees advocate Jessie Taylor. Taylor travelled to Indonesia, where she met with asylum seekers. A collection of the stories she heard were shaped into a documentary named, ‘Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea’ (2006). The film makers involved created a stir with the ad line: 'The film that Tony and Julia don't want you to see’. (Peter Galvin, 2013) The