Racial
in sentence
558 examples of Racial in a sentence
However in less than 10 minutes of watching the movie you find out that the primary point of the movie was to tell about
racial
tension in WWII.
To believe that class and
racial
biases would be so easily and comfortably suspended would only come from someone totally unfamiliar with the ante-bellum south.
Most of the characters come off as either contemptible or stereotypical, oftentimes both (observe the unbearable, several-minute segment where an African-American introduces a new list of
racial
categorizations on "Jerry Springer"), and I found myself wishing they would all get the "tails" end of our protagonist's coin by the end.
I didn't expect Spike Lee to force-feed me more garbage on
racial
tension, mob-justice, or the inability of the common citizen to make a choice under pressure by peers.
Anyone using
racial
prejudices with such bad intent like Lantos(producer9and director is racist for me.Karadzhic, Izetbegovich, Milosevic, Tudjman they are all monsters and I blame them for destroying my life, my family, my country, Yuggoslavia.
What I didn't like about the film was that it was full of stereotypes of what typical
racial
characters would do in their role.
I'm not so concerned with the
racial
controversy, as I wouldn't mind seeing a movie take that issue on with a little levity.
While I am a strong believer that there is too much
racial
profiling happening in Hollywood, even today, I do not believe that Townsend's directorial debut did much to stop it.
Trying to be polically correct this movie still enforces
racial
stereotypes.
Racial
slurs are thrown about without any feeling or meaning behind them, in the hopes of setting up a
racial
tension that for me never materialized.
A candid, cinematically-unique expression of
racial
hatred.
I couldn't tell if it was about
racial
issues in London in the 1950s or about not selling out.
But it's the
racial
angle that makes 'Set It Off' a particularly saddening example of contemporary film-making.
Worse, 'Set It Off' exploits the theme of
racial
discrimination and disadvantage simply as a device to prop up its feeble plot structure.
Jim McKay gave a talk (Q&A) about the film afterward which presented his ironic situation: how to get distribution for a film which portrays minorities (women, non-whites) working on resolving controversial issues (teen pregnancy, teen motherhood,
racial
identity, single-mother households), and how to write a faithful script on all of these topics being a mid-thirties white male.
I mean Rock was hilarious in the movie and the whole switching with the
racial
stuff breaks a little barriers which is great.
Growing up in a multi
racial
neighborhood back in the 20's and 30's, I grew up very close to most of the Italian families living there.
I have not been able to view this confection for many years as the 'race commissars' in England have deemed it too offensive to be shown in multi
racial
Britain.
The city may explode because of it:
racial
tension because of the black school boy and social tension because of the insecurity such criminals free to roam around and go on with their criminal activities represent to the public.
Its subtle themes of belonging, identity,
racial
relations and especially how colonialism harms all parties, transcend the obvious dramatic tensions, the nostalgic memories of the protaganiste's childhood, and the exoticism of her relationship with her parents' "houseboy," perhaps the only "real" human she knows.
The film is strong and emotional but that very historical limit makes it rather weak today, especially since the film does not mention the third
racial
community, the Indians.
I couldn't relate about the
racial
discrimination that Antwone has experienced because I'm living in my own country.
This looks like real people, hardly formula driven and thankfully drives my statement against
racial
prejudice home, gracefully and heartfelt.
Mencia is known for poking and making fun of
racial
issues.
I had watched this film from Ralph Bakshi (Wizards, Hey Good Lookin'), one night ago on www.afrovideo.org, and I didn't see anything
racial
(I am not stupid), I do admit the character designs are a bit crude and unaccpectable today, but I think it's a satire and a very,very urban retelling of the old Uncle Remus stories that the Black American culture, created right down to the main characters and the blatant nod to "The Tar Baby" and "The Briar Patch."
While some today might think it is rife with
racial
stereotypes, for the time the very idea of Chinese protagonists was progressive in and of itself.
While the show does contain its share of potty jokes it also contains a lot of satirical material and pokes fun at social problems,
racial
barriers, cliché's,stereotypes etc.
Where do the issues about poverty, the economy, deficit, high taxes, inflation, and
racial
injustice come in?
Here Paul Robeson plays a role that transcends the ludicrously ridiculous
racial
stereotypes that Hollywood wanted Mr. Robeson to play.
The soundtrack is amazing, one of the best I've heard on a film so far, the script leaves a lot of room for improvement for my taste, but its somewhat compensated by the artistic risks taken by the director to highlight
racial
differences, conflict and equality.
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