Preview

Walkout Movie Analysis

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
293 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Walkout Movie Analysis
During class we saw the film “Walkout”, it was a film that made me cry not only once but twice. The film showed the stereotypes and the expectations of Chicanos. I found the film being quite interesting because I could relate to it in many ways. For instance, I was also not allowed to speak Spanish in school and I was also the first generation to apply to a University. I always thought the walkouts were peaceful, I had no idea how brutally students were attacked. It was quite sad seeing students being hit by “what we call protection”. It was much more disturbing knowing that these students were being punished for fighting the injustice they were experiencing. I have to admit I was quite surprised on the numbers of Chicanos attending college,

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Although this movie mainly concentrated on the Los Angeles walkouts, it also depicted a well-known Chicano organization called the Brown Berets; the Brown Berets were known for their militant and nationalistic ideology that was often unsuccessful in bring attention to their cause, which was giving better higher education for Chicanos in Mexican-American neighborhoods.…

    • 364 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The movie “Walkout” is a movie that tells the story of students who struggle in the high school rights that are given to them. The students boycotted the high schools to improve their way of education. This money was an interesting movie that showed the history of “Chicanos” who are also known as people of Mexican descent. The movie did a great job in showing the struggle that the Chicanos had to go through so they could improve the quality of education that was given to them. One part that I especially love about the movie is when the main protagonist of the movie “Paula Crisostomo” was told by her father to never join a boycotting group as it could change her way opportunities. Paula continuously tries to talk with a group of people who want…

    • 245 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Movie Analysis: Doubt

    • 480 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Sister James and Sister Aloysius play a very important role in John Patrick Shanley’s movie Doubt, which is about the mistrust that takes place in a school directed by the church on priest Flynn command. There, sister Aloysius is the principal, so she is in charge of the student’s rights and responsibilities. On the other hand Sister James is a history teacher. Both characters are important for their way of handling the doubt.…

    • 480 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Reading about the San Francisco State College Strike, it became very clear how racist and hypocritical the U.S. educational system was. Students, faculty members and community activists had to fight hard for equal access to higher education and a new education curriculum that would include studies of the history and culture of all people including ethnic minorities. As Asian Americans were facing similar systematic discriminations, they joined other racial groups to initiate and support the student-led Strike. Government officials viewed students’ demands as too extreme and their activism just a fashionable movement to disrupt the system. As a result many students got beaten, arrested and jailed.…

    • 316 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Sara thought she was never going to be able to work to fund her education and lost all hope. With the implementation of DACA her dream of receiving an education at UCLA became a reality. Another speaker that stood out was a second year by the name of Erika. Erika’s mother suffers from the mental illness Schizophrenia. Her mother was deported and arrested for being undocumented and Erika’s upbringing was tough. Erika closed her presentation with a quote that stayed with me, it goes as follows “you do with what you can or have”. No matter how tough the circumstances are in life you have to deal with what you have and continue living. My friend Josh had the privilege to speak in front of the audience and it was nice hearing what he had to say. He made good points about the citizenship test. He said that the citizenship is bullshit and that it is crazy how the government makes people from different countries learn about the history of U.S. United States citizens probably would not pass the test if they were tested. I believe that injustice is prevalent for undocumented people and there needs to be a…

    • 620 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Watching these events unfold visually compelled me in way I never quite had been before from an emotional standpoint- the social implications of these events are so much graver and severe than I had even thought previously. As the documentary noted in the third act, racism is so deeply rooted in American soil that one born here or moving here after the most blatant forms of racism have vanished (segregation) finds themselves unwittingly fitting into racialized society. Without viewing films like these and having the kinds of discussions we do in class about institutionalized racism, it is rather easy to accept it as normal having grown up from a place of privilege.…

    • 875 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    During this time other students like Paula would go thru school days with many privileges such as the right to use school restrooms denied. Not only this but physical punishments where inflicted, some to ideas so obscured as to speak Spanish in certain classes. Paula and other students like her decided to do something about it. Inspired by Sal Castro, a history teacher from Lincoln high, these students successfully came forth with a walkout protest for equality. Sadly many students’ parents weren’t agreeing with this agitator movement.…

    • 416 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Movie Analysis for Up

    • 770 Words
    • 4 Pages

    This paper will focus on interpersonal relationships; more specifically, romantic partners and the development of a relationship in a scene from the movie Up. Relationship development has two spectrums of stages: coming together and coming apart. This paper will focus on the stages taking place in the coming together phase, the relational norms and outcomes, speed of stage advancement, character role in each stage and how they could improve on their interpersonal relationship.…

    • 770 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    I believe that our nation has finally come to understand what Martin Luther King Jr.s dream actually meant. However, because we understand this doesn’t mean we’ve all acted to make it become true. I believe that it’s hard for some people to forgive and adapt to the new ways of life. In Martin’s speech he says “One day all White and Black children will One day hold hands”. In order to reach this goal I think a cycle will have to be completed to make people get rid of their prejudice thoughts and hateful actions.…

    • 437 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The Chicano Student Movement was established to dispute unjust school conditions for Mexican Americans. The Mexican American society had the highest high school dropout rate and lowest college attendance among any other ethnic group. Many schools in The United States did not treat Mexican Americans fairly, by prohibiting them or their teachers to speak the Spanish language and not allowing them to create political or cultural groups. Chicanos were often placed in vocational training classes or classes for the mentally disabled which discouraged them from higher learning. Chicanos wanted smaller class sizes, revision of their textbooks to include Mexican American history, and better educational services and facilities. Their demands weren’t met; therefore students threatened walkouts, which they called blowouts. The largest and most impressive blowout took place in Los Angeles, California in 1968, where approximately 15,000 Chicano students walked out of schools and generated similar actions among students in several black and white schools. Los Angeles public schools are paid based on the number of students in class each day, so by walking out before attendance was taken, the students could single out the schools financially. After several more blowouts at different schools, The Los Angeles Board of Education set up a meeting to discuss their concerns. Chicano…

    • 1102 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Walkout. In the 1960s the education in the Latino community was a poor quality, the dropout rate was over high. The Latino student were not taken serious by the LAUSD board and were not given the same opportunities as the White student were given. Tired of the poor quality of education the Chicano students, lead by the educator Castro, decided to walk out of their classes in 1968 and started a series of protest against the unequal conditions in the LAUSD high schools. This civil movement changed the poor and unequal conditions in the Latino community high schools.…

    • 515 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Chicanoism Today

    • 636 Words
    • 3 Pages

    In many historical moments of the 60s, you could find many racial groups emerging for their rights to liberation from oppression. The Chicano/a movement was certainly one you couldn't miss in the books. Organizations like the United Farm Workers or the Brown Berets, as well as protests and rallies such as, pro-Affirmative Action, helped in glorifying the meaning of Chicano/a power. It made many Mexican-Americans proud and not alone in a country that didn't want them there. Yet with such an upraising in praise and pride for this new identity, the movement declined gradually throughout decades to come. Not much political activism had gone on but the word Chicano/a carried on but not in the sense that the Chicano/as of the 60s intended it to be. It would become an identity to those born in America of Mexican parents.…

    • 636 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Chicano Movement

    • 812 Words
    • 4 Pages

    In the 1960s, when the student movement was at its peak, the Chicano movement brought about impulsive actions like the mass walkouts by high school students and some Hispanic teachers. In Denver and East Los Angeles in 1968 and the Chicano Moratorium in Los Angeles in 1970. There were also many walkouts outside LA. In the LA County high schools of El Monte, Alhambra, Bakersfield and Compton students marched to fight for their rights. In 1978 similar walkouts took place in Houston to protest the discrepant academic worth for Latino students. There were also numerous student sit-ins in hostility to the reduced funding of Chicano…

    • 812 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the documentary “I am not Your Negro” directed by Raoul Peck, the most memorable moment for me is the section focuses on integration at American public school. It is difficult for me to believe that many people march on the street only because an African American girl is going to school with the white kids, and I feel really angry and shocked when people are saying things like “when a negro child walk into the school, all decent parents should take their white children out of the broken school”, or “God can forgive adultery, but he is angry about integration ”. Even though those comments and events can have a huge impact on social discrimination and hurt to African American, they are real things that happened in the American history, and…

    • 829 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Fences Movie Analysis

    • 403 Words
    • 2 Pages

    A movie like Fences only comes once in a great while. It is sort of an unconventional movie, unlike most. It is filmed almost as though it is a play, which is exactly how this film got its origins. Written by August Wilson in 1985, Fences started off as a Broadway play that ended up winning the Pulitzer Prize for Best Drama in 1987. This drama focuses on exploring the African-American experience and looks deep into the heart of race relations.…

    • 403 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays