Color of Fear
...comical. I think the movie dealt very well with the different perspectives and experiences that were in the room, but a problem that I found in the movie was that every time the man from Ukiah spoke and fueled more people the other white guy was quite. I really didn’t hear much from the other white guy. Maybe he was laying low after initially hearing the man from Ukiah speak and he saw how the response was to that, so maybe he told himself I better play it cool. What I found strange about the movie is that the entire picture was the five guys in the room having discussions. It got a little uninteresting after a while because the same stuff was repeated over and over. I felt what would of made the documentary more interesting was if the director kept the interviews and discussions that were in the movie and tied in some of the stuff that went on while the five men were together in the house for five days. It’d be interesting to see what was said then and who conversed with whom, if there was separation among the people. Every thing that was discussed in the movie still goes on today. The Chinese man spoke about his father always talking about how the Japanese are arrogant and cannot be trusted. About a month ago I was reading the newspaper and I read a huge article about people in China destroying Japanese businesses in China and rioting by the Japanese Embassy. That was something that was very profound about the movie that a couple of the men spoke about how their fathers influenced their thoughts about people different from them. How these fathers brainwashed these prejudices into their son’s head. I found something that one of the black gu...