Monday 10 December 2012

A Very Special Christmas DVD Review!

Rather than choosing one of our Christmas DVD's, we've chosen...5 of them!
 
Here is our rundown of all things Christmassy in the DVD Zone.
 
5) Elf
Buddy the Elf is no ordinary Elf. In fact, he’s not an Elf at all. As an infant, Buddy adventurously crawled into Santa’s sack one Christmas eve and was accidentally taken back to the North Pole where he was adopted by one of the Elves. A few years on Buddy is three times taller than everyone else, has no natural capabilities in hand crafting toys and is beginning to question his origins.  Papa Elf tells him that his Father lives in New York City and has no knowledge of Buddy existing as his Mother put him up for adoption and died shortly afterwards. Don’t worry, it gets more cheerful from here.
So off Buddy goes to meet his Father, Walter, who is less than impressed when Buddy arrives at his office in full elf uniform and starts singing to him. Buddy suffers a fair bit of misfortune in New York including getting accidentally drunk in a post room, being hit by a taxi cab and getting into a fight with a toy shop Santa. However, some good does come out of all of this when he meets the blonde haired, blue eyed Jovie, a beautiful little Elf who works at the toy store. However, Jovie has also lost all of her Christmas Spirit, as has the majority of New Yorkers, including Walters wife and son.
 
Christmas Eve is soon upon us and Santa’s sleigh breaks down and crashes into Central Park. The engine is broken and the presents need delivering and the rawkus has attracted quite a crowd of people curious as to what ‘fell from the sky’.  Santa tells Buddy that the only thing to make his sleigh fly is Christmas cheer, and what’s the best way to spread Christmas cheer? ‘By singing loud for all to hear’. Expect a good old rendition of Santa Claus is Coming to Town, a lump in your throat, a warm feeling in your belly and very happy ending.
Will Ferrell is the perfect oversized Elf and his love of Christmas, Syrup and his Father lead him into some quite interesting situations. Predictable yet well executed, Elf will never have the classic status of something like Home Alone, but it is still a great Christmas movie that sets out to do exactly what it wants to do.
 
4) The Grinch
 ‘Inside a snowflake like the one on your sleeve, there happened a story you must see to believe’
It's Christmas in Whoville, and all the Who’s are frantically rushing around doing their Christmas shopping, grabbing bargains and knocking each other over. One of these Who’s, Cindy Lou, becomes frustrated that everyone, even her family have lost sight of what Christmas is all about. Feeling glum. She looks for a distraction and her adventurous little mind stumbles across the story of The Grinch, a hateful creature who lives on Mount Crumpit, overlooking the town. The Grinch hates Christmas, everything about it he loathes and despises, the only thing he seems to tolerate is his dog, Max. Nobody knows the reason behind his hatred, but what we do learn is that his heart is ‘two sizes too small’, withering away inside his green, fluffy chest. 

Cindy Lou wants to find out why the Grinch is so hateful so she speaks to his Mothers. She learns of his unfortunate childhood and the bullying he received at school in front of his childhood sweetheart Martha May. Little Cindy Lou decides that she wants to reignite the fire in the Grinch’s belly so she goes to Mount Crumpit to invite the Grinch to the Whobilation (Whoville’s most important celebration), hoping this might encourage him to show a bit of festive spirit. The Grinch however sees this as an opportunity to get into some mischief, but he ends up enjoying himself and getting involved with the festive activities. Things turn sour when the Mayor proposes to the Grinch’s childhood love Martha with a ring the size of Mount Crumpit and makes a mean joke about the Grinch in front of the whole town. The Grinch then tears the town apart and burns the Christmas tree before returning to his cave to wallow in self pity once more.
Hating the Whos, he builds a sleigh and steals all the presents and trees from every Who in Whoville. Although a successful haul, it fails to dampen the spirits of the Who’s below who start singing. Cindy Lou wants to wish the Grinch a Merry Christmas so ascends the great Mount Crumpit. The Grinch, angered that he hasn’t destroyed Christmas doesn’t notice Cindy Lou and his sleigh starts slipping towards her. A mixture of the singing, the realisation that Christmas isn’t something you can steal and the sight of the endangered Cindy Lou causes the Grinch’s heart to grow three sizes and he saves Cindy Lou’s life.
Not only is this film funny, but in true Dr Seuss style, it has a fairly significant message too. Jim Carrey is hilarious as the Grinch, and young Taylor Momsen perfectly illustrates the innocence of youth through Cindy Lou. It has all the elements of a good Christmas movie; a villain, a hero, a moment when the villain becomes the hero and lots and lots of snow. The glue that holds the whole thing together is the enchanting poetic legacy of Dr Seuss.
 
3) Miracle on 34th Street - 1947

Set between Thanksgiving and Christmas Day, Miracle on 34th Street is regarded as one of the greatest Christmas movies of all time. In New York City on the day of the Thanksgiving Parade, the man hired by Macy’s department store to be Santa Claus is intoxicated so the store manager, Doris, hires another man who calls himself Kris Cringle to take his place. This man claims to be the real Santa Clause but Doris, doesn’t believe in the notion of fantasy and has taught her daughter to think the same. Kris Cringle is regarded as insane by the people around him and after an unfortunate dispute with a psychologist; he is despairingly forced into failing a medical exam, proving his insanity. However, people start to see something in him, the improbability of events that occur just don’t add up and even Doris and her daughter start questioning whether he may in fact be the real Santa. Doris hires Fred Gaily, a friend of hers to represent Kris in court where they can fight for his sanity and prove he is the real Santa. All hope seems lost and the light at the end of the tunnel is barely visible, surely what they need is a miracle…
Directed by George Seaton in 1947, it’s a classic Christmas tale and was remade in 1994 by Les Mayfield. For today’s audience, it is very dated.  Even the 1994 version is dated but it's timeless message will always stay the same.
 
 
2) The Muppets Christmas Carol

I could have chosen the normal A Christmas Carol, the animated A Christmas Carol or even, Scrooge but instead I went with The Muppets, as it is one of my personal favourites.
The story, as we all know, is based on the classic tale written by Charles Dickens about a greedy, hateful man called Ebenezer Scrooge. He is horrible to his employees, to his family and he is the most hated man in town. He is visited by three ghosts on Christmas Eve who show him the past, present and the future. Firstly, reminded of his past and the moment he lost his one true love because of his reculsive and negative attitude. He is then taken to the present to Bob Cratchit’s house, one of his employees, who has a dying son called Tiny Tim who just wants his family to be together and happy for Christmas. Here he sees that material possessions and money are not what is making this family happy, but the love they have for one another.  Finally, he is shown the grim reality of what the future holds for him and for poor little Tiny Tim.
It’s the perfect redemption story and other adaptations it can be quite eerie. However, this version is by The Muppets so there is very minimal eeriness and lots more silliness instead. Scrooge is played by Michael Caine, and Bob Cratchit and his wife are Kermit and Miss Piggy. The story is told by Charles Dickens, otherwise known as The Great Gonzo and his pal, Rizzo the Rat. It’s a highly entertaining adaptation of a classic Christmas story and its message is just as clear, albeit slightly devoid of some of the novels more poignant moments.  With plenty of songs to sing a-long to, and moments to laugh out loud to, it’s a great family film that doesn’t get boring, in true Muppets style, when things start to get a bit serious, they just do something stupid to make up for it. 
 

 
      1) It’s a Wonderful Life
A year before Miracle on 34th Street hit the movie theatres, It's a Wonderful Life enchanted audiences with its beautiful, honest tale of one mans relentless selflessness overcoming all odds. Set in New York, the film follows a troubled young man called George Bailey. George’s family and friends have been praying to the heavens for someone to help him, and so an Angel called Clarence, who is yet to earn his wings, reviews George’s life with the head Angels to decide whether he deserves their help or not.

The film chronologically moves through George’s life from the age of 12 to his present age at the beginning of the film. We see the sacrifices he made as a young man, and how his efforts to travel the world are constantly thwarted by some sort of incident which ends up making him stay. Things repeatedly look hopeful and then everything crashes down around him over and over again. He and his new wife even sacrifice the money saved for their honeymoon in helping the company George started from going bankrupt. George and Mary start a family and his brother, Harry, receives the Medal of Honour for serving in WWII. Things certainly look like they are on the up. That is until the evil Mr Potter, from a rival company, unlawfully acquires money from George and his company goes into bankruptcy. George goes and gets drunk at a nearby bar and after crashing his car into a tree he tries to commit suicide by jumping into a river. However, Clarence the Angel’s moment to shine arrives and he jumps in the river first, knowing full well that George will save him.  Clarence reveals himself to be George’s Guardian Angel, and George tells Clarence he wishes he had never been born, so Clarence shows George what the world would be like if he wasn’t in it. All the good things that happen to George’s family and friends were out of acts of selflessness of George so without him everything goes wrong for everyone.  George learns to value and appreciate what he has, and Clarence allows him ‘to live again’ earning him his wings and George a wonderful life.

Despite a mixed reception on its release, It’s a Wonderful Life appears in the BFI’s 100 greatest films of all time list, and AFI’s and IMDB’s. It’s the epitome of a Christmas movie, it’s heartfelt and emotional yet funny and serious all at the same time. The fact that it’s set at Christmas time is the cherry on top of an already magnificently iced cake.

I don’t know about you, but I’m beginning to notice a theme with these Christmas movies…New York, bad guy turned good, redemption, morals…? Anyway, why not give one of these films a go and invite that warmness into your heart that only a Christmas movie can bring.

 "Welcome Christmas while we stand, heart to heart and hand in hand."
- Dr Seuss (1957)

 
Further Reading in The Information Store:

Elf – DVD ZONE – 791.43
The Grinch – DVD ZONE – 791.43

The Muppets Christmas Carol – DVD ZONE – 791.43

It’s a Wonderful Life – DVD ZONE – 791.43
Miracle on 34th Street – DVD ZONE – 791.43

Why not take a look at our Christmas display of books by the Issue Desk? We’ve got everything from cookery to crafts!
Happy Christmas Everyone!

Monday 26 November 2012

Consider yourself invited!


Vince Laws (poet, performer, artist and campaigner) will be giving a talk and performance of his poetry in the HE Zone next Monday (3rd December).

Vince campaigns to remove the stigma of HIV and mental health. He will be in the HE Zone from 12-1pm, please come along and show him your support for some or all of this hour. It looks to be a full on and exciting hour!


http://www.vincelaws.com/cv.htm

Friday 16 November 2012

Coming soon...Road Safety Week

Watch this space or, more specifically, the seating area in the Information Store next to the newspapers.

Next week we will have a selection of books and DVDs for you to borrow on learning to drive, and most importantly, learning how to drive safely.

The Wellbeing Zone also has a wide selection of leaflets about road safety - pop upstairs and have a look.

Monday 12 November 2012

DVD Review - 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)


November sees in the release of the highly anticipated film The Master. Directed by Paul Thomas Anderson who has brought us such films as Magnolia and There Will Be Blood, The Master is set to be one of the films of the year. What’s so special about it? Probably the most exciting thing is that it has been shot on 70mm film and will be shown in this format, which means that the resolution will be higher, clearer and much crisper. To put it simply, it has been shot on a much larger piece of film within the camera than most other films, so its double the size and double the quality. For those of you who thought IMAX was the best picture quality you were going to see, think again!

This swiftly brings me on to today’s film, 2001: A Space Odyssey, which was famously shot on 70mm, just like The Master, but way back in 1968. This didn’t stop it being a spectacular looking film which earned the film’s director, Stanley Kubrick, an Oscar for visual effects. What perhaps is most remarkable about 2001, is that audiences marvelled at what it was creating as a future world, showing huge space ships spinning through space, high tech gadgets, special anti-gravity shoes and futuristic furniture that no one had really seen before, as science fiction films were not particularly well established at the time. The visual effects were so breath takingly realistic and Stanley Kubrick created them without even using a computer. He used models and manipulation of the film cells to create his effects, an art which has long since bitten the dust. Before Man had even landed on the moon, Kubrick had made a convincing and technologically accurate film about space travel.

Written by Arthur C Clarke and Stanley Kubrick, 2001 starts off on Earth in prehistoric times where we watch a family of Apes or ‘hominids’ as they would rather be known go about their daily lives of hunting, fighting and sleeping. A tall, black, rectangular object appears to them one day and subsequently they learn how to use rocks as weapons and kill animals for food. It was this important discovery that kick started our evolution from ape to man.  We then hop forward a few thousand years to Dr Heywood Floyd who is travelling through space in a large, rotating vessel en route to the moon. We learn that something has been discovered on the moon which is remarkably similar to the object that appeared before the hominids. A great amount of mystery surrounds this object, which they call a Monolith, as it is assumed to be ancient extra-terrestrial intelligence. Dr Floyd and his team are sent to the moon to examine it, only to retreat again after it omits a painful, high pitched screech.

18 months later Dave Bowman and Frank Poole, two young astronauts, are travelling on board the aptly named Discovery spaceship bound for Jupiter for a so called ‘training mission’. Little do they know, they are following up the excavation of the Monolith 18 months previous.  Their space ship is controlled by super computer HAL-9000 who has been programmed to behave and speak like a human, and to act as a friend to Bowman and Poole.  HAL suddenly starts behaving strangely and reporting that communication devices are broken when they are not. Things rapidly go from bad to worse when HAL completely turns on Bowman and Poole and tries to kill them. Bowman escapes in a small pod and travels through a psychedelic tunnel of lights and flies over strange foreign lands in an unsettling and trippy sequence culminating in his arrival at Jupiter alongside our old friend the Monolith. Things get very strange now as Bowman lands in a baroque, French style bedroom. There are no windows, no doors and the floor is made out of light. Bowman goes through a series of stages whereby he moves through the room by looking at older versions of himself, which he then becomes. This progression allows Bowman to rapidise his life and become the ultimate version of himself. He noticeably ages three times until finally he is an old man lying on his death bed where the Monolith appears to him at his feet. He raises his hand towards it and is transported through it as a foetal baby where he is reborn as a master of the universe. I know this may sound like I am making it up, but I promise you this is what happens, it's not the easiest thing to synopsise so I suggest you see for yourselves!

Kubrick and Clarke shared a vision to create the ultimate science fiction movie and this one has it all. Its meaning is hard to decipher, especially of the end, but Kubrick didn’t want everyone to been spoon-fed meanings and philosophies. 2001 is essentially a depiction of the evolution of Man from our most primitive form to our most intelligent, predicting what Man could be capable of doing in the year 2001. Throw in a murderous computer, a few reprises of Strauss’ Thus Spake Zarathustra and a horse painted like a zebra and you’ve got yourself something really quite special.  

Paving the way for great science fiction movies of the future like Bladerunner, The Alien Quadrilogy and even Prometheus, 2001: A Space Odyssey is a ground-breaking piece of cinema that is replicated time and time again in modern culture. Unfortunately, it’s not for everyone. It was poorly received when it was released and gained its fame from a cult following of 60’s youths who found it ‘trippy’ and has been splitting audiences for the past 44 years. I highly recommend it to science fiction fans, Kubrick fans and those of you who enjoy something a little bit different.

The nights are drawing in and the weekends are predominantly rainy, so borrow it from the DVD Zone, snuggle up in the warm and prepare yourself for the ultimate Stanley Kubrick experience…
 
Find 2001: A Space Odyssey in the DVD ZONE at shelfmark 791.43.
 
 
Further Reading in the Information Store:
 
Find other Stanley Kubrick films like The Shining, Barry Lyndon and Full Metal Jacket in the DVD Zone - under 18s beware!
 
Science Fiction Cinema from Outerspace to Cyberspace by Geoff King - BOOK ZONE - 791.43615
 
Stanley Kubrick: Drama and Shadows: Photographs: 1945-1950 - BOOK ZONE - 770.92

Friday 9 November 2012

DVD review


Ishbel's DVD review

 
As the night's get darker, I have found myself borrowing lots of free DVDs from the Information Store.
 
My colleagues Lucy and Graham recommended a film I wouldn't usually have borrowed: 
 
 “Aileen, life and death of a serial killer” (on shelves at 791.4353)
 
 
 
It made for both thought-provoking and disturbing viewing. It is a documentary about America's first female serial killer, covering her troubled childhood, the violent murders she committed while she was a prostitute, ending with interviews given during her time on death row.
 
The film leads us to question whether the death penalty should be given to someone who appears to be insane. The film gave me plenty to think about, and its message will stay with me for a long time - I highly recommend borrowing a copy. Find it in the DVD lobby area, or ask a member of staff to point you in the right direction.
 
 

Tuesday 6 November 2012

Join the space race!

Fed up emailing yourself files from home to college? Try saving files to the cloud.
 

www.dropbox.com/spacerace

CCN is taking part in the "Dropbox space race" - sign up to get free online storage space for you and for CCN, it's free!


I followed their instructions and now have about 30GB of free storage!!

NB  Other cloud storage companies are available...


Monday 5 November 2012

UEA cards

UEA cards are now ready to collect!

Collect yours (come along with your CCN ID) from the Information Store at the main campus.

If you and your class would like your UEA cards/passwords sending over to St Andrews House, please ask your tutor to email tis@ccn.ac.uk and we will arrange for them to be sent to SA103.

Friday 2 November 2012

"TEXT" exhibition in the Information store

An exhibition of altered books by the students of Creative Arts.

The work has been created in response to books becoming superfluous in the advent of the digital age.  Students have responded in many ways to one of their first projects, demonstrating imagination and flair.

Pop into the Information Store to see many of these pieces of art on display....




Which is your favourite?





Monday 29 October 2012

DVD Review - Psycho (1960)


 
It’s Halloween! What better way to spend your Halloween night than watching scary movies with your friends? How about giving the infamous Psycho a try? Made in 1960, by the master of suspense, Alfred Hitchcock, it stars John Gavin, Janet Leigh and Vera Miles as three unfortunate souls who come face to face with the superbly creepy Mr Norman Bates, played by Anthony Perkins. Based on the 1959 novel of the same name by Robert Bloch, Psycho is loosely based around the notorious grave robbing psychopath, Ed Gein, whose Wikipedia page is not for the faint hearted, trust me!

After stealing $40’000 from her boss to help her soon to be divorced boyfriend, the beautiful Marion Crane runs away from her hometown of Phoenix, Arizona. After driving all night she gets interrupted by a huge rainstorm which forces her to pull into the sinister Bates Motel, run by a creepy young man called Norman Bates. Norman takes quite a liking to Marion and invites her to dinner with him that night, but after overhearing an uncomfortable exchange between him and his mother, Marion suggests he admits his mother to a mental institution to which he doesn’t respond positively and she retreats to her room. Then she decides to have a shower. Need I say anymore? I think we all know what happens to Marion in the shower.
So less than an hour in, the woman we all thought to be the main character has been killed. But by who? And so the mystery thickens, and not long after this hideous crime is committed and the evidence is plunged into a lake, Detective Arbogast is hired by Lila, Marion’s sister and Sam, Marion’s boyfriend to locate Marion and the missing $40’000. His search leads him to the Bates Motel and after questioning Norman about the whereabouts of Marion he concedes him to be suspicious. He looks around the motel and spots a woman standing in the window of the house on the hill behind the motel. He calls Lila and Sam, tells them what he has seen and ventures up to the house. Not long after he arrives at Bates residence, he is greeted by a kitchen knife in the face and a few stabs to the chest, thus ending the life of Detective Arbogast.

Lila and Sam end up phoning the local police when Arbogast doesn’t call her back, explaining about the woman in the window. The Deputy seems puzzled as he recalls that Norman’s mother had been dead for 10 years, and brushes their story off, leaving them no choice but to go to the Motel together. They pretend to be a married couple and hire out a room from the dreaded Norman, and soon enough their curiosity gets the better of them and Lila sneaks into the house. It doesn’t take long for Norman to notice that Lila has gone, so he rushes up to the house to find her. I shan’t say anymore for fear of ruining the ending, but let’s just say this; it’s not exactly a happy one.
Psycho is considered to be Hitchcock’s masterpiece, earning him a fortune at the box office as the studio didn’t want to associate themselves too much with what they thought was going to be a failure. Hitchcock succeeded in creating a suspenseful and highly successful horror film that terrified audiences, and even Janet Leigh into never having a shower again. So many elements of the story are kept from the audience, and the mystery surrounding the Mother character builds oodles of suspense. By never showing us her face or her body in full we begin to question why Hitchcock is keeping her from us, leading us to ask questions about her physical appearance, perhaps she’s severely disfigured? Or maybe she’s not a ‘Mother’ after all? Or worse..?

It’s a clever device and Hitchcock shrouded the production of his film in mystery, only to enhance the actual mystery within, he made production staff take an oath not to reveal the ending, and he even had a chair for ‘Mrs Bates’ so that nothing could be leaked or expected. All this attention to detail, and willingness to protect his own movie made the ending all the more terrifying, shocking and downright weird, giving it the ‘masterpiece’ status that it still has today.
This is what horror movies are made of and fifty-two years on, it’s obviously quite dated. So my advice, watch it with friends on Halloween and have a good laugh. Or, watch it on your own at night in the dark and have nightmares.

Happy Halloween everybody!
Find Psycho in the DVD ZONE shelved at 791.43
Further Reading in The Information Store:
A Long Hard Look at Psycho by Raymond Durgnat - BOOK ZONE - 791.4372
Hitchcock on Hitchcock by Alfred Hitchcock - BOOK ZONE - 791.430233092
Alfred Hitchcock: A Life in Darkness and Light by Patrick McGilligan - BOOK ZONE - 791.430233092
There are also loads of Hitchcock films in the DVD ZONE, and two great box sets chronicalling his work!
How about checking out our display of Halloween themed books by the Issue Desk?

Friday 26 October 2012

Free book for Halloween!


Free audio book  - download it before Halloween and with each download, Audible will donate 50p to Booktrust!

See Neil Gaiman's blog for more details.

 
 
 

NaNoWriMo event - tomorrow


Tuesday 23 October 2012

Trick or Treat!







Come to Information Store this week if you dare to check our horror books and movie collection and help us celebrate the Halloween!



This week, all books and DVDs will be issued for one extra week – 7 day loans for two weeks and 3 week loans for four weeks, so you’ll be able to enjoy them over the Halloween weekend.

Most of our horror movies and stories are in the DVD lobby area/recreational reads section. Please ask at the issue desk for more information or for specific titles…


Cover image

A few titles to choose from:
Title: The mammoth book of best new horror
Authors: Stephen Jones
Medium: Book
Class: 823.91
Copies: Available (1)

Title: The Exorcist
Authors: Mark Kermode
Medium: Book
Class: 791.4372
Copies: Available (1)

Title: Horowitz horror 1.
Authors: Anthony Horowitz
Medium: Book
Class: 823.91
Copies: Available (1)

Title: Interview with the vampire
Authors: Anne Rice and Neil Jordan
Medium: DVD
Class: 823.91
Copies: Available 





















Cover image






Monday 22 October 2012

DVD Review - The Help (2011)


Continuing with the theme of Black History Month comes a triumphant film about one young girls efforts to combat racism in Jackson, Mississippi in the 1960’s – The Help.

The era in which this film is set played favour to the Civil Rights movement, during which a young African-American Activist called Medgar Evers was assassinated by a member of the White Citizens Council, Byron De La Beckwith, in 1963. Evers’ activism was focussed around equality in civil rights for white and black people, and shortly after President Kennedy made his address in favour of this cause, Evers was shot by the future Klu Klux Klan member. It was a time of change for America, but it was difficult making this a reality. The Help revolves around a young, aspiring writer called Eugenia ‘Skeeter’ Phelan, who wanted to expose the racism and abuse that occured from white home owners to their black hired Help in her home town of Jackson.

Upon returning home from University, Skeeter learns that her families Help, Constantine, suddenly quit her post with the family and returned to Chicago. Sceptical Skeeter finds it hard to believe she would have done this voluntarily, without saying her goodbyes. In the 60’s, the Help were mostly responsible for raising the children of the families they lived with as well as performing other maids duties. Young girls of this time, like Skeeter, often had a deep admiration and bond to their Help as they were closer to them than they were to their own Mothers.

As an aspiring journalist, Skeeter has her own newspaper column called ‘Homemaker Hints’ and seeks the knowledge of her friend Elizabeth’s Help, Aibeleen. Skeeter grows increasingly concerned when she sees the way in which her friends treat their maids, especially the acts of Hilly Holbrook, whose maid Minny is Aibeleen’s best friend.  Hilly introduces the ‘Home Help Sanitation Initiative’ whereby she proposes a law for a separate toilet to be given to the Help as she believes they carry diseases.  Desperate to put an end to this appalling treatment of such devoted women, Skeeter asks Minny and Aibeleen to tell her about the racism they endure on a daily basis to be part of a book she wants to write. They reluctantly agree for fear of getting in to trouble, but as Hilly’s scheme becomes closer to being a reality they start talking. Skeeter writes a draft of her book and a publisher takes interest, she tells Skeeter to get more maids to testify as it will make a stronger case.

Upon learning of the assassination of Medgar Evers, the other maids soon come forward and Skeeter fills her book with various stories from maids all over Jackson, including one that Minny calls ‘The terrible awful’ – I shall say no more and let that one be a surprise! As more terrible things happened to the maids in the neighbourhood, the more they came forward with their stories and so Skeeter’s book was finished, printed and published.  After sharing her earnings with the Help who testified and basking in the glory of Skeeter’s success, we return to Aibeleen, whose final moments on screen are emotional, uplifting and full of hope, as she leaves her household to start a brand new life.

Adapted for the screen by Tate Taylor and based on the 2009 novel by Kathryn Stockett, The Help offers an original insight to a world that had a blind eye turned to it for so many years. The themes of racism and discrimination are strong in this film, although perhaps sometimes slightly washed over, nevertheless it certainly invites a heavy emotional investment to its characters, lead strongly by Viola Davies who plays Aibeleen. It was very well received and addresses issues faced by the Black community without allowing the politics to envelop the storyline, the only way the Help learn about what is happening during the Civil Rights era is by catching snippets of television or radio and from word of mouth. If the politics and events of the Civil Rights Movement had been a heavy plot point, it could have potentially detracted from the small town vibe that Tate Taylor was trying to create.

The Help is a really great film with a strong message and acts as homage to the women it portrays,

The Help is an excellent Black History Month film, and perhaps you might even like to give the book a try too!
 
You can find The Help DVD in the DVD ZONE - Shelfmark 791.43 and the book in the BOOK ZONE - Shelfmark 823.91 STO. Ask someone at the issue desk if you have trouble finding them!
 
Further Reading in the Information Store:
 
To Kill a Mockingbird - BOOK ZONE - 823.91 LEE
Independence and Equality (1940 - 1968) - BOOK ZONE - 323.4
Making Their Mark - BOOK ZONE - 323.4
 

Holidays!!

This time next week - it's half term!

If your half term is going to consist more of catching up on assignments than catching up on sleep then don't worry, the Information Store will be here to help.


We're open next week from 9am to 5pm, Monday to Friday.

What are your plans for half term?