Top 10 Movies About Real Life Heroes
This coming Thursday, May 15, is the big Bloggers Unite for Human Rights Internet event where thousands of bloggers worldwide will be blogging on human rights issues.
So, I thought I'd start the week off with my top 10 list (in no particular order) of movies with storylines centering on real life human rights heroes. All but one of the movies may be found on DVD and are worthy of watching again...and again!
1. Hotel Rwanda
Director
Terry George's 2004 film of how one man, Paul Rusesabagina, a hotel
manager, dared what seemed to be impossible odds by protecting more
than a thousand Tutsi refugees during one of the world's worst acts of
genocide. While the majority of the world turned their back on the
Tutsi in Rwanda, Paul Rusesabagina bravely opened up the hotel to as
many Tutsi refugees as he could and at the risk of his own life and the
life of his family, he stood strong against the Hutu militia and all
other forces. Don Cheadle's performance of real life hero, Paul
Rusesabagina is one of the finest screen performances of all time. This
is a movie not to be missed. In the midst of the most horrible of
times, hope and courage prevail. To learn more about Paul Rusesabagina
and his continuing work to help the women and children affected by the
genocides in Rwanda and other African nations, visit the Hotel Rwanda Rusesabagina Foundation
2. Rabbit-Proof Fence
For
more than 60 years, 1910 - 1970, children born of Australian Aboriginal
and Torres Straight Islander decent were forcibly taken from their
parents by the Australian and State government agencies for the
purposes of training them to become domestic workers and thus,
integrating them into a white society. Director Philip Noyce's 2002
film tells the true life story of three young mixed-race girls who were
a part of this "Stolen Generation" in Australia. In 1931, Molly Craig,
her younger sister and a young cousin were stolen from their mothers
and taken to the Moore River Native Settlement 1500 miles from their
home. Escaping not long after their arrival, Molly leads her sister and
cousin on a nine week journey back home -- all the while being tracked
by both a white man of the law and a black tracker. Staying one step
ahead, Molly leads the girls home by following the rabbit-proof fence
that bisects the continent. This story is beautifully told in both
dialogue and imagery. To learn more about Australia's Stolen
Generation, visit the European Network for Indigenous Australian Rights.
3. A Woman Called Moses
Cicely
Tyson is an actress that can cause tears to well up in my eyes just at
the mention of her name. To me, her ability to bring the power,
vulnerability, and beauty of a character to the big screen is rarely
matched. She is simply outstanding. In 1978, Cicely Tyson brought a
performance to the small screen that I have never forgotten. Director
Paul Wendkos's television movie brought the real life story of
humanitarian, abolitionist, and Union spy, Harriet Tubman to the
public. Having escaped from slavery herself, Harriet Tubman made 13
dangerous missions to free 70 slaves through the "Underground Railroad"
- safe houses set up by antislavery activists; aided John Brown in recruiting
men for his raid on Harper's Ferry; was the first woman to lead an
armed exhibition in the war; guided the raid on the Combahee River
liberating more than 700 slaves; and in the post-war era she fought for
women's suffrage. Harriet Tubman was a woman of great courage, faith,
and determination to help change the world for the betterment of all
man and woman kind and Cicely Tyson could not have been a better choice
to play such a noble human being. To learn more about Harriet Tubman,
visit www.harriettubmanbiography.com.
4. Anne Frank Remembered
Jon
Blair's 1995 Academy Award-winning Best Documentary on the life of Anne
Frank and her family should be a must see on everyone's list. With
previously unseen archival footage, this film brings a picture of Anne
Frank, who some call "the holocaust's most famous victim" to life like
never before. With narration by Glenn Close, Kenneth Branaugh and Joely
Richardson, this story of the Frank family's time in hiding during
World War II in Amsterdam, Holland and Anne's wise-beyond-her-years
outlook on life is the first time an audience fully sees Anne for the
person she was -- a young girl who would change the world by teaching
us that even in the darkest of hours, believing in the goodness of
humanity is not only possible, but right. To learn more about Anne
Frank, visit the online Anne Frank Museum.
5. The Killing Fields
Anyone
who saw director Roland Joffe's 1984 film when it was first released
will probably remember leaving the theater in silence. The power of
this movie earned it 7 Academy Award nominations in all of the major
fields including Best Picture, and Oscar wins for Best Supporting Actor
Haing S. Ngor, Best Film Editing and Best Cinematography. Based upon
the true story of New York Times reporter Sydney Schanberg's coverage
of the civil war in Cambodia in which 2 million "undesirables" were
"ethnically cleansed" under the direction of tyrant Pol Pot. During one
of the most horrific acts of genocide, Sydney Schanberg and local
representative, Dith Pran record and report the most tragic of events
shedding light on the truth and the madness -- reporting which would
lead Sydney to receive the Pulitzer Prize. When the American forces
leave Cambodia, Dith manages to get his wife and children on the
transports, but stays behind to continue helping his friend cover the
horrific events. Being an American, Sydney is able to freely leave
Cambodia, but the same is not for Dith. True life hero, Dith Pran was
captured by the Khmer Rouge and spent nearly 4 years in labor camps
throughout Cambodia suffering extreme hardships. This film shares the
amazing story of strength in friendship and the strength in the human
spirit during the reign of one of history's most brutal dictators. To
learn more about Dith Pran and Cambodia's Killing Fields, visit The Dith Pran Holocaust Awareness Project.
6. Gandhi
Nominated
for 11 Academy Awards, director Richard Attenborough's 1982 film
received an outstanding 9 Oscars in 1983: Best Picture, Best Director,
Best Cinematography, Best Film Editing, Best Writing, Best Art
Direction, Best Costume Design, and Best Actor in a Leading Role for
Ben Kingsley. Serving as a biography of Mahatma Gandhi, Attenborough
tells the tale of the lawyer turned leader who led the people of India
-- advocating non-violence and truth -- in campaigns to organize poor
farmers and laborers against discrimination and oppressive taxation;
the liberation of women; the alleviation of rampant poverty; economic
self-sufficiency for the nation; a commonality among the various
religious and ethnic groups; an end to the "untouchability" and caste
discrimination; and most of all, independence for India from foreign
domination. Ben Kingsley's moving performance of Gandhi is something to
watch again if you have not seen this film since its release in 1982.
To learn more about the life and teachings of Mahatma Gandhi, visit www.mkgandhi.org.
7. Schindler's List
As
history teaches when a brutal dictator arises, whether it be out of
fear, greed, ignorance or whatever, many people, weak in character,
succumb to the ways of such brutality. However, as history also
teaches, greatness of character also arises within the few unwilling to
give into fear, but rather bravely hold fast to their belief in
humanity and the rights of their fellow mankind. Nominated for an
incredible 12 Academy Awards and receiving 7 including Best Picture and
Best Director, director Steven Spielberg's 1992 film brings the heroism
of real life Oscar Schindler to the big screen and to the world. Set
during the autraucities of Hitler's holocaust, Spielberg brilliantly
recounts Schindler's courageous work to save more than 1,200 Jews from
death at the hands of the Nazis. An unlikely hero, Schindler discovers
the truth within him -- humanity is more valuable than money -- and
proceeds to defy all odds in saving as many Jews as he can. Once a war
profiteer, Schindler eventually died penniless having spent all his
money to save and protect his list of Jews. To learn more about Oscar
Schindler and his wife, Emilie, who served along side him, visit The Oscar Schindler Story.
8. Iron Jawed Angels
Some
may claim this to be more of a civil liberties film, but I see it as
both a civil liberties film AND a human rights film. When an entire
population of human beings is shut out of having a voice in how their
government is to be run because of their gender, race, or religion,
then I see it as a human rights issue. Knowing how government affects
our daily lives, real life suffragists Alice Paul and Lucy Burns fought
with all of their might to win women the right to vote in the United
States of America. Director Katja von Garnier's incredible 2004 HBO
film sets a new standard for period pieces. Incorporating contemporary
music, camera and editing techniques, Katja tells the story of Alice
Paul and Lucy Burns, played by Hillary Swank and Francis O'Connor
respectively, as they take on not only Washington D. C. politicians and
President Woodrow Wilson, but the National American Woman Suffrage
Association founded in 1890 by Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady
Stanton. Successfully leading the campaign that brought the
passage of the Nineteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution in 1920
giving women the right to vote, Alice Paul and Lucy Burns discovered
just how determined many men -- and women -- were to prevent this from
happening. At times fighting with their very lives, these courageous
women and their team soldiered on. Two women that should be in every
American history school book, OH GOSH, surprisingly are not. If you
have a daughter, BUY this dynamic DVD! Have it on hand. Teach your
daughter(s) about the women who fought with their lives to make this
world a better place for all women who would come after them -- a place
where your daughter(s) have an equal voice to your son(s). To learn
more about Alice Paul and her legacy, visit the Alice Paul Institute. To learn more about Lucy Burns, visit the National Women's History Museum.
9. The Great Raid
What's
a war movie doing in a top 10 human rights hero movie list? Exactly
what it should be...telling the real life story of a small group of
Army Rangers and Filipino soldiers who risked their lives to liberate
more than 500 American Prisoners of War in the Philippines during World
War II AND telling the story the real life woman, Margaret Utinsky, a
Medal of Freedom recipient, who risked her own life to smuggle life
saving medication, food, shoes, and money into the Japanese POW Camps
during this same war. Director John Dahl's 2005 film relives the Army
Ranger raid on Cabanatuan, a real life Japanese POW Camp in the
Philippines, with amazing historical accuracy. Understanding that this
is a major motion picture and not a documentary and certain film
license is needed, the director's cut of this movie is truly a credit
to John Dahl's dedication to honoring the heroes of this war in the
Pacific. The culture of the Japanese military at the time of World War
II viewed prisoners of war as almost non-human. Their treatment of
POW's was barbaric to say the least. Under the command of real life
heroes Captain Bob Prince and Lt. Colonel Henry Mucci, a small band of
120 Army Rangers and a group of Filipino soldiers travel 30 miles
behind enemy lines and up against thousands of Japanese to successfully
achieve the greatest military rescue in the history of war. The
director's cut of this film is the version to see and the additional
material included in this set is powerful beyond description. To learn
more about Margaret Utinsky, visit WW II Remembered. To learn more about the raid on Cabanatuan, visit Army Public Affairs.
10. Norma Rae
Based
upon real life hero Crystal Lee Jordan, director Martin Ritt's 1979
film, which won Sally Field her first Oscar, focuses the world's
attention on the rights of workers. Fighting for the rights of decent
pay for decent wages and decent working conditions - the right to
unionize, Norma Rae stands up to not only corporate pressure and
threats, but to those in her own circle of relations who want her to
just shut up. With dialogue like this, it's a no wonder that this film
was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Writing:
Agreeing to organize a campaign, Norma asks her minister to use the church for a union meeting. "That's black and whites sitting together," Norma tells him. Horrified, the minister responds, "We're going to miss your voice in the choir, Norma. To which she says, "You're going to hear it raised up somewhere else."
What Crystal Lee Jordan was able to accomplish for workers in America, through great threat, pressure and the loss of her job, was no small miracle. And Sally Field's performance stand today as one of the great performances in the history of the cinema. To learn more about how labor unions fought to honor the American workforce, visit infoplease.com.
When you think of movies that tell the story of real life human rights heroes, which ones come to your mind?




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