Real People Really Have Their own Identities!
Real Women Have
Curves Film Critique
Drew Durham
The film Real Women Have Curves is
a 2002 directed by Patricia Cardoso is a film adaptation of
a stage play by Josefina Lopez. The movie is focused on its protagonist a
first generation (her parents were immigrants) Mexican American teenager named
Ana Garcia (played brilliantly by America Ferrera). Ana Garcia is an overweight
Latina rebel with a cause. She is out to prove herself, define herself by her
own choices, and most of all to be the first in her family go to college. Her
mother Carmen (played by Lupe Ontiveros)
is strictly conservative in her ideals, her teachings and her perspective.
Carmen constantly insults her daughter Ana about being overweight, and is
strongly against Ana going to college, saying Ana must work and settle down,
get married and have kids already, since Carmen’s other daughter Estella (Ana’s
sister) owns the dress factor and seems uninterested in more than just her
business, as it is struggling. Carmen works in her sister’s sweat factory
making a sub minimum wage while working on fancy department store dresses. After
asking her father for a loan to save the factory, Ana says that she never knew
Estella worked so hard.
After discussing her future with
her father and after much encouragement form her high school English teacher, Ana
receives a grant to Columbia University in New York. Her mother Carmen refuses
to give her blessing, but her father supports her no matter what. This final
statement, Ana leaving her families home and starting her own new future, is a
clear declaration of independence and a strong refusal of her mother’s
conservative model of women as submissive and with less worth than men. Estella, the dress factory owner, and Ana’s
sister agrees with Ana’s decision.
The communication groups within the
film are all Hispanic or Latino/a, but the purpose of the film is to have the
audience relate to the characters and learn or be reminded of the value of
individuality in any culture and how this individuality can cause rifts in any
family and across all culture/identity lines. I liked the message of brave self-expression
and self-definition and how these two together show the beauty of each and
every person. I think the cultural communication was plain to see in Carmen’s
strict limits and rules and Ana’s acceptance of all nuances, and differences.
It seems to me that education changes a person a lot, I think especially in
certain cultures it can be more difficult to hold strong on to traditional
values if members of that identity group become more and more educated, this
movie is a great example of that for first generation Mexican Americans. The
culture difference in this movie is a generation gap, a paradigm shift.
The communication groups in the
film are mostly generational groups and the people in groups who have been
given authority. There is a brief interaction between Estela, Ana and a Hispanic
executive Mrs. Glass who sternly refuses to give the loan so that the factory can
have the time and power to fill the dress orders for the department store (thankfully
Ana’s father loans the money just in time!).
The intercultural dynamic was mainly
between Ana’s immigrant parents Carmen and Ana’s father and their first generation
Mexican American child Ana. There was plenty of conflict and none of it was
really ever resolved. Sometimes that how life is, not every story has a happy
resolution for all relationships, in any given family this can be true. As for
managing and resolving intercultural differences, I noticed mainly how it was
left unresolved, how there was still this gap seemingly unbridgeable between
Carmen and Ana at the end of the film. Neither Ana nor Carmen showed to be
giving any ground or looking for any commonalities at all in their
communications with each other. The feel good part of the movie was Ana’s
father and her sister Estella who both realized Ana’s individuality to be just
as important as her ancestry, or ethnicity.
I learned or was reminded that someone’s
culture can be comforting, but it can also be insulating, and used a protection
from the rest of the world. We can live in ancestral predefined cultural or
traditional bubbles or we can, each one of us, define the way we want to be
identified as individual human beings. But this might mean assimilating or
integrating and thus identifying with more ambiguous identity labels such as
Mexican American as opposed to Mexican. Perhaps it is because of the narrowly
restrictive limit of options for Ana’s future that she decides to leave the
traditional role of a Mexican Woman for chance at a better life.
I like the distinction Arasartnam
writes about in his 2011 text between assimilation and integration. The
difference, he writes is in attitude toward the culture of origin. If the
individual in question has a negative attitude toward the culture of origin and
a positive of the host culture then that is assimilation. Whereas if the
attitudes toward culture of origin and the host culture are both positive then
that is integration. (Arasarnam, 2011, p. 70) In my eyes Ana is assimilating as
she has a negative opinion of her mother’s values.
I really like the way that Ana is
unafraid, perhaps brash, and rude at times, but honest with herself and staying
true to what she wants. We can all learn that all people can really make their
own identities, and are free to express who they, who we really are.
References
Arasaratnnam,
L. A. (2011). Perception and communication in intercultural spaces. Lanham,
Maryland: University Press of America.
IMDB. (2012, 08). Synopsis for real women
have curves (2002). Retrieved from
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0296166/synopsis
LaVoo, G.,
Brown, E. T., López, J., Cardoso, P., Ferrera, A., Ontiveros, L., Oliu, I.,
... HBO Video (Firm). (2003). Real women have curves. United
States: HBO Video.
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