Although Mother India was
an older, somewhat goofy film in the eyes of what film is today, I really
enjoyed, and was surprised to watch, the girl-power exhibited especially by the
mother, in a film made in 1957. When I think of women in America in 1957, I picture
housewives raising children, vacuuming in high heels, and having a drink in
hand for when their husbands came home from work. Radha was spirited, firey,
and displayed a wide variety of emotions, even in the short clips we saw. She
is brave, stubborn, loving, intelligent and hard working. I bet if the American
women of the 50’s watched that movie they would have a heart attack at the
amount of work that she did in those fields. This brings up an interesting
question of women in American and/or Western culture. Why do many (but
definitely not all) women thrive on being presumed as helpless or fragile by
their male counterparts? The desire to be skinny rather than built and strong,
obsessing over fashion, nails, hairstyles or purses, and stating “Oh I’m just
going to marry rich” are themes and attitudes that are portrayed by Hollywood
and in the media. Not every woman is this, but every woman knows somebody who
is. Just a thought…
Fire had
girl-power in it too, but in a much more subdued way. This was because the two
women were restricted by the chains of the patriarchal society, as discussed in
Mayo’s article. I found myself rooting for them throughout the entire film
though, because being able to love whomever you want is an important cause to
me. I was relieved that finally at the end, the women overcame the cultural barriers
and left their wifely duties to live their lives in happiness, the way every
human should.
Oh this sentence breaks my heart: "to live their lives in happiness, the way every human should."
ReplyDeleteThank you for writing it.
Spring
I really agree with you about the fact that each of these films showed strong female figures. That much is definitely certain. However, I think the strength of Radha in Mother India was out of control. It just really bummed me out she killed her own son. To me, that just ridiculously out of line.
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