The Color Purple Comments

  • Chadrick 2021-12-11 08:01:18

    Regardless of race issues, this film tells the story of black domestic violence. Three women, with different destinies, are all desperate and resisting men. The three women used three different methods, compromise or struggle. The endings are different, but on the whole, this is an excellent feminist film. Chag’s blues are like the black version of Marilyn Monroe. It’s amazing. I didn’t expect it to be taken by...

  • Anthony 2021-12-11 08:01:18

    Shaving is really good. Race, gender, class, and general awakening are all available, but the interruption still has an ambiguous and ambiguous attitude. Spielberg tried his best to show his artistic pursuits, but there is always a feeling of observing fire on this...

  • Nakia 2021-12-11 08:01:18

    Want to see more details or read the original novel by Alice Walker. Many places in the plot are far-fetched, too centered on the theme! What I watched was a Mandarin dubbed DVD, and I once regarded it as a successful comedy ==! Du Niang Alice Walker is like the heroine! Oprah's cameo is also amazing! I heard about the miserable life of the black Americans in that era. I heard that they are still so shocked and pitiful in Africa...

  • Rhoda 2021-12-11 08:01:18

    The film about the resistance. Black women have significant effects on black men, and black young men have significant effects on black old men. The plot of the blacks' resistance to the whites is somewhat absurd. No matter how the mayor's wife is attached to people of color, it is impossible to recruit a black man who beats his husband and goes to jail into his own house as a maid. This is a serious...

  • Renee 2021-12-11 08:01:18

    Spielberg's feminist novel is biased towards the black perspective but retains the rhythm of his storytelling. I have always been disgusted with sympathy movies that are twitchy and contrived, but this one is so plain that I am moved. Xia Ge's tall and independent female personality inspires Xili step by step. In addition to external forces, Xili's eternal pursuit of her sister is more important in this process. The downside is that there are too few first-line explanations to my sister, and...

  • Mavis 2021-12-11 08:01:18

    I have heard about the name of the original novel for a long time, but I haven't read it. The movie adapted by Spielberg is...

  • Johnathon 2021-12-11 08:01:18

    The ten Oscar nominations are all on the street. Spielberg’s films about human nature will never appear at all. The words such as subtle and fascinating will not appear at all. There are occasional black humorous scenes in the first half, and the later will be quite satisfactory. The most powerful woman is Albert's...

Extended Reading
  • Ruth 2022-04-19 09:01:55

    Housework is not women's responsibility

    Sophia's fate in the play shocked me deeply. She had a sense of resistance since she was a child, and she put it into action, but she still failed to resist the oppression of the environment! Looking at Sophia who came out of prison, there is no soul, only the body. As if silently telling...

  • Nellie 2021-12-11 08:01:18

    Foreign films when I was young

    If we hadn't watched this movie, some of us might not have imagined the social status of black women in the early 19th century. They became working slaves to the family at birth. Not only that, but also served as male family members. Sex slaves, including her own relatives, will treat them like...

The Color Purple quotes

  • Squeak: Harpo! Who dis woman?

    Harpo: Now come now, you know who this is.

    Squeak: She best'a leave you alone.

    Sophia: Fine with me.

    Harpo: [to Sophia] You ain't got to go nowhere. Dis here my juke-joint.

    Squeak: [to Harpo] You said dis here our juke-joint!

    Harpo: Listen woman, can't a man dance with his wife if he wants to?

    Squeak: Not if she a heifer!

    [to Sophia]

    Squeak: And not if he my man! You just a big ol heifer. Ha Ha Ha.

    Sophia: [to Squeak] Like I said, fine with me!

  • Old Mr.: [referring to Shug] She black as tar, nappy-headed, got legs like baseball bats, and I hear she got that nasty women's disease.