Annotated Sources
ANNOTATED SOURCES
Lee Daniels' The Butler: Film research based on; I chose this because I have always been interested in the reconstruction of America after the civil war and the abundance of the Civil Rights Movement in this film gave me that new perspective.
Time.com: "The True Story of 'The Butler'": This gave me more information regarding the true story behind the movie and the relationship between that and what was portrayed.
NPR.org: "'The Butler': 'It's Not A Movie - It's A Movement'": I gained more insight on the actual severity of the issues displayed that was not only on screen, but that the director and actors felt as well. Daniels' speaks of times where he was scared and even the actors were as this was "the hardest thing he's ever done."
Hollywoodreporter.com: "President Reagan's Son Attacks 'Lee Daniels' The Butler'": I gained more information regarding the aftermath of what occurred in the movie and again following the truth behind it and how it was displayed. This even by an opinionated family member of one of the Presidents reenacted.
Newyorker.com: "'The Butler' and Philip Roth": Gave me more insight regarding the reality behind this story and how significant the struggle really was for these people who suffered for so long.
Huffingtonpost.com: "Movie Review: Lee Daniels' The Butler": Focuses on the earlier part of the story how it actually begins in the 1920's in the film working on a farm as a boy, then Cecil finally comes to the White House in the 1950's where racial politics are first reaching headlines.
Vulture.com: "Edelstein: The Butler Is Crudely Powerful": Took in more information of the true intensity that is in this film, and that is what makes it so powerful. Many scenes were graphic and hard to watch as you can see the heart breaking of the actor under the mask of their character.
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