Crash
Paul Haggis's 2005 drama Crash is a vehicle for exploring social tensions in the United States. Although a huge portion of the film is devoted to race relations, prejudices, and stereotypes, an important meta-narrative also permeates Crash. That is, the film subverts the traditional Hollywood norm to "present working people not only as unlettered and uncouth but also as less desirable and less moral than other people," as Parenti puts it (1). Instead of depicting the members of the middle, upper-middle, and upper classes as being morally, intellectually, and socially superior to those of lower classes, Haggis presents a world in which all people are equally as culpable of creating a dystopian society in America. Each of the characters in Crash is besieged by stereotypes and prejudices that prevent a genuine encounter with others in the multicultural landscape of Los Angeles. Moreover, race is a tag for underclass, and not necessarily linked to actual socio-economic category. Each of the characters in Crash has an in group-out group status consciousness based on race or social class. Haggis shows that people in the upper classes are not necessarily heroic, as Parenti might predict. Likewise, Haggis shows that people with lower class status are not in need of rescuing by the upper class. The characters of Jean (Sandra Bullock), Officer Ryan (Matt Dillon), and Farhad (Shaun Toub) especially illustrate the ways Haggis flips the Hollywood class stereotypes on their heads, revealing an alternative vision of heroism.
Jean Cabot harbors racist and prejudicial beliefs. She is an upper-middle class woman who drives an SUV and lives a classic suburban Los Angeles lifestyle. Cabot is also unhappy, and is aware of being unhappy. Haggis shows that Jean's unhappiness is directly linked to extreme loneliness and social isolation. For instance, Jean is shown in several scenes interacting with her housekeeper. In one scene, Jean has an emotional breakdown in which she al but confides in the housekeeper as her only friend. The scene is poignant, because it shows the weakness of being part of the upper social strata, and simultaneously humanizes and uplifts the power of the lower social strata. The housekeeper is entrusted and empowered with the ability to become the hero, in a grand role reversal.
The same can be said for Officer Ryan's character. One of the least sympathetic characters throughout the film, Officer Ryan is a stereotypical racist white cop. His attitudes toward black cops and black civilians are equally as deplorable. Ryan is from a working class background, and would seem to fit neatly into the Parenti model of showing the lower classes of being incapable of genuine heroism. However, Ryan reveals a heroic side of his nature in his treatment of and devotion to his ailing father. Ryan cannot fully overcome his prejudice, but he does symbolically rescue a black woman who happens to be of an upper middle class background. The rescue scene establishes Ryan as being more complex than a typical "white trash" cop, as might be expected in less sensitive films.
Parenti claims, "virtue is more likely to be ascribed to those characters whose speech and appearance are soundly middle- or upper-middle class." In Crash, this is not necessarily the case. No character is fully equipped with virtue or vice, and all characters demonstrate having both. Social class status is not a predictor of virtue, as can be seen in the character of Jean Cabot. Likewise, social class is not a predictor of vice, as all characters in Crash exhibit prejudice and narcissistic behaviors. One of the most notable characters in Crash is that of Farhad, who is the Persian store owner. As a Persian man, Farhad has been tagged as being an underclass individual. He is associated with the terrorists because of his appearance, and as a result, Farhad comes to live in fear. American society has failed him, as he is not free and has no opportunity for the type of upward social mobility that the American Dream had promised. Prejudice and racism is something he contends with on a daily basis. Yet Farhad also comes to harbor his own racist and prejudicial beliefs. Ultimately, Farhad gets a gun and intends to use it to murder a man. This would seem to establish the underclass as being less virtuous than the upper class in Crash, but this is not the case. Farhad is redeemed by an act of fate -- which is the fact that the gun was filled with blanks. Had Farhad actually gotten away with murder, then he would have been clearly established...
Imdb.com). What Mrs. Pell says to agent Anderson is both poignant and ironic: "Hatred isn't something you're born with. At school, they said segregation what's said in the Bible...Genesis 9, Verse 27. At 7 years of age, you get told it enough times, you believe it. You believe the hatred. You live it...you breathe it. You marry it" (Pell, (www.imdb.com).This movie was not a documentary albeit it did follow the plot
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