Slavery
in sentence
393 examples of Slavery in a sentence
Jefferson's relationship with his daughters and their feelings on
slavery
was also underdeveloped, yet his eldest daughter's rebellion (Patsy)is a key event late in the film.
Well sexual
slavery
is a dreadful and very real world wide problem and this pile of bilge utilises this plague as a plot device to titillate and tease, shame on everyone involved for that piece of questionable judgement.
Suffice to say that I have rarely been so insulted by such a dreadful piece of drivel and as for the real problem of sexual slavery, girls go voluntarily to new 'jobs' in distant lands and are abused, raped, and often killed by the gang master who meets them off the boat/plane and takes their passports and freedom.
Think of what its director, William Wyler, faced; in the aftermath of a military victory over statist powers who had committed abominable crimes and engulfed the world if battles, he was making a film that argued that the US's leaders were themselves profoundly anti-individual--that they had "wasted the best years of the lives of those drafted or misled into fighting the war--which since it ignored the rights of individuals had been for nothing except argument over the degree of
slavery
men were to exist under."
Director Mario Penzauti and screenwriter Tecla Romanelli cram this fetid filth with a teeming surplus of sizzling sleaze: we've got nasty rape, interracial copulation (one white lady makes wild love to a muscular black stud while he's tied to a cross), copious female nudity, brutal whippings, vile degradation, lots of lurid soft-core sex, and a severely twisted tragic surprise ending that mixes elements of incest, murder and miscegenation in a questionable attempt at making a statement about the horrid inhumanity of
slavery.
When she gets over her head and the Yakuza capture her, she learns their insidious plat of doping up girls and selling them into
slavery.
In this movie, pedestrian regrets for
slavery
go hand in hand with colonialist subtexts (the annoying redhead feeding Shaka rice?).
If Ashanti had been a serious attempt at a film about the institution of slavery, still prevalent in third world countries the film might have been better received.
This is an extremely silly and little seen film about
slavery
in the West Indies and it stars Puddy from the "Seinfeld" show! Patrick Warburton made his film debut in this contrived movie and he's noticeably slimmer here.
The story at the outset is interesting:
slavery
in the (late) 20th century from west Africa to the Arab Middle East.
Antwone's path to emotional health encompasses a whole breadth of family history, the history of
slavery
and its aftermath.
In total contrast to American
slavery
and the Jewish Holocaust's exposure, South Africans' struggles have been told by a mere two or three stories: CRY FREEDOM, CRY THE BELOVED COUNTRY (OK, Count it twice if you include the remake), and SARAFINA (did I miss one?).
Set in a middle class neighborhood in the imaginary town of Willard in the 1950s, this dark comedy with a light touch toys with such American obsessions as gun mania and violence, materialism and keeping up with the Joneses, fear of others, slavery, golf, and the disposing of the dead.
This one, with its altruistic pretensions to expose
slavery
in the 1970s, shows the best and worst values of Africa, which turn out not to be too different to the values of humanity as a whole.
It's has everything from slavery,the way they were treated, religion, the ways Jews were sent into hiding,the inquisition, the belief in the Orisha the African gods, the way women were treated,including the daughters.
The Jayhawkers maybe unique in the annals of screen history in that as a film with a Civil War era plot it makes absolutely no mention of
slavery.
It shows the inhumanity of
slavery
from the point of view of those who lived it.
I refer to the Willie Lynch Speech on slavery, which figures prominently in this movie.
But while Moore used the shrinking US job market as an entry point into a career exposing the economic
slavery
being imposed on this nation (and others), this fellow chooses to attack a man that should very well be a hero to his father and surely his own self.
A very compelling story of what
slavery
was really like.
Recommended if a firsthand, true account of
slavery
as it truly was would interest you.
While I would NOT say that you shouldn't watch it (I am a huge believer in Free Speech...period), I think the problematic view of
slavery
at least deserves a mention!!
This just reinforced the horrible stereotype of the 1930s that
slavery "
wasn't THAT bad"!
The end result is a mass of confusion which attempts to focus on Jane Austen's book "Mansfield Park", biographical sketches of Jane Austen herself, as well as an historical look back at black
slavery
issues simultaneously and doing none justice.
It was interesting to see Shaft taken out of his surroundings (NewYork),as he is coerced into taking on an international mission going to Africa to help crack down a
slavery
racket (Africa to France),and the man at the top.
Frank Finlay plays the main villain (Vincent Amafi), who heads the
slavery
racket.
The movie does have a strong ending as Shaft makes his way to Paris and saves the day,as he shuts down the
slavery
racket.
This program goes through the history of
slavery
with an open and honest account of how brutal and heinous
slavery
was.
Hailes Sankofa is the first and best movie about
slavery
ever made.
He made the movie outside of Hollywood and this resulted in a honest view on the history of
slavery.
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