By idiots. No doubt to someone sitting in a nice office, hardscrabble ag work for barely enough to live sounds “like” slavery. Heck, the term has even been given to those working in those nice offices or have you not heard 'wage-slave"?
Work was similar, yes. But Master couldn’t beat you, rape your daughters, or sell your sons. Free and poor is a LOT better than slave and poor.
In some ways I actually found The Help more racist.
Hattie McDaniel played a mammy character in Song of the South, a surprisingly small role for somebody who had won an Oscar playing a similar (though much better written) character several years before. Octavia Spencer won a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for playing another sassy rotund black domestic last month. While I wasn’t wild about the movie and hated the book I am a huge fan of Octavia Spencer’s and don’t dispute she’s an Oscar worthy talent at all, but the role itself I found very ironic.
And poor Cicely Tyson: she’s a mega talented actress (though she has a “hard to work with” reputation), but she must be so damned sick and tired of playing maids.
I find it kind of odd and interesting that Disney would chose characters (albeit non-controversial characters from the animated portion) from Song of the South to be the main themeing for it’s Splash Mountain ride at it’s themeparks.
Usually they want a tight marketing link between ride themes, movies, and merchandise. How did they manage to theme a multi-million dollar ride based on characters from a film that they won’t let anyone see?
At the time the ride was unveiled, Song of the South hadn’t been locked away in the vaults. In fact, the opening of Splash Mountain was timed to coincide with re-release of the film (as it happened, the last re-release) in 1986.