Showing posts with label Homework. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Homework. Show all posts

Tuesday, 21 February 2012

Questions to be answered about Pressure (Horace Ove, 1976)

1. What event occurred in the 1970s and 1980s that represent the presence of racial tensions?

Pressure was released "in the wake of Black exploitation cinema's peak, well after the political impact of the genre's early films had been softened by formulaic storylines, in an attempt to appeal, as the studios saw it, to a broader mainstream audience". Black exploitation films, like Pressure, were "seeking to carve a niche for themselves within the system, not trying to overthrow or transform it". 
BBC website on Race in the 1980s: The riots of 1981 were largely sparked by racial issues. In Brixton, the spiritual home of Britain's afro-Caribbean community, youths rioted amid resentment that the police were targeting more and more young black men in the belief that it would stop street crime. Similar riots followed in Liverpool and the Midlands. The subsequent Scarman Report found that "racial disadvantage is a fact of current British life".

2. Why do you think Pressure was made?

I think it was made because it was able to show how unjust people are to the black population. It shows how prejudiced and racist they can be and as it is told from a Black person's perspective it seems like he is speaking for the rest of the Black population and is  rising up to get their story heard, so that they can finally feel a part of Britain and not just classed as "foreigners" and "outcasts".

3. What examples of racism are represented in Pressure?

A lot of racism and prejudice is shown through the police. They are shown to stop mainly only black people, seem to always be suspicious of them and never seem to believe them only thinking that they are liars. Also, the fact that Tony has been rejected by so many employers after he has had an interview just because he's black because he is qualified for the jobs he applies to. Racism is shown again when Tony's white friend invites him into her flat but the landlady wants him to leave straight away because he is black she thinks he is 'trouble'.

4. How does the theme of collective identity come across in Pressure?

The Black people in the film all come together to help each other out, for example, they steal together and share food as they are just all trying to survive. They are becoming more and more united in the film, especially during the 'Black Power' meeting as they all share the same views and want to fight for their place in England as it is theirs as well now. Tony joins the 'Black Power' group but it took him a while to get to that position as he felt before he didn't fit in with them as he was born here in England and had an English education so he felt it already was his home and he didn't see himself as an outcast.

5. How do you think Pressure differs from mainstream representations of Black Britons?

I think the film shows how the Black population were really feeling at that time, for example, isolation, loneliness and foreigners. The film had a Black director which would have highly influenced the way it represented Black people. I think that the film differs from mainstream representations of Black Britons by showing that they didn't want to just "fit in" and be like the English people living there, they had their own culture and they want to celebrate that and keep to their own traditions.

Notes on 'Pressure' (Horace Ove, 1976)

  • British food - fry up - typical 'English' Breakfast
  • Reggae music played past the shop
  • Breakfast similar to Trinidad - avocado/zaboca (what the 'natives' call it)
  • Tension between the two brothers and their identity (Breakfast scene, eating different food, eating differently - knife and fork compared to slicing the avocado with a knife in your hand
  • Different taste in music
  • Different sides of the table
  • Never got a job before
  • "Not like us. He born here" - Different
  • Just because he's black he wasn't born in England
  • Tony doesn't understand why he didn't get the jobs before
  • The interviewer assumes Tony has been in trouble with the police before because he's black
  • The white interviewers stare at Tony when he coughs
  • Song playing over the noise 'Mother sent me to a World so unfriendly'
  • English education should sort you out for your life
  • 'Bill Haley times'
  • Meeting about black people, instead Tony goes to the 'Bird's Nest' with his white friends
  • Reggae music played during the black power meeting
  • English education keeps black children "suppressed and blind to what is going on"
  • Bitterness, hatred and anger results from the system
  • Chicken and chips
  • Land Lady chucks out Tony because he's black but doesn't say it herself, she implies it
  • Black people accused of 'rape' towards white women
  • Tony says 'pate' instead of 'pattie'
  • Black person is arrested for carrying an 'afro-comb' as it looks like an "offensive weapon"
  • Brother Colin wants Tony to 'think Black'
  • Individualism is a white man's desire
  • Colour, culture, Collectiveness = Blackness
  • "Black people dress up, kneel and beg the white man (Jesus) for forgiveness
  • Drive all black thoughts from your heart and replace them with white good ones
  • Black people already 'Under all that pressure' - then the police always pick them up off the street
  • "To the white man, every black man look the same"