Amend: alla conquista della libertà
Titolo originale: Amend: The Fight for America
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
8,0/10
1625
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Analizza il quattordicesimo emendamento della Costituzione statunitense, che nel 1868 ha promesso libertà ed eguale protezione a tutte le persone diventando il caposaldo della democrazia ame... Leggi tuttoAnalizza il quattordicesimo emendamento della Costituzione statunitense, che nel 1868 ha promesso libertà ed eguale protezione a tutte le persone diventando il caposaldo della democrazia americana.Analizza il quattordicesimo emendamento della Costituzione statunitense, che nel 1868 ha promesso libertà ed eguale protezione a tutte le persone diventando il caposaldo della democrazia americana.
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Kudos to the whole team behind it. I saw a lot of movies and series treating single topics regarding the fight for equality in the U.S.A. But this series truly shows the overarching correlations. How the politics and narratives of the money making slavery business profoundly poisoned the society for over hundred of years. How the past echoes through people minds and keeps them trapped into toxic belief systems. This series is educational on so many levels. After viewing "Amend" I appreciate the first article of the human rights even more: "All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood."
Very informative documentary on the creation and impact of the 14th Amendment. It dives into the civil war and post reconstruction America and how the 14th was not accepted everywhere and rules created to get around the 14th by using "States Rights" as an excuse. The doc covers the plight against black America, women, and LGBTQ+, in regards to the use of the 14th to grant them rights.
This documentary is absolutely amazing! A must-see for teenagers and adults! Will Smith is charming as always, and brings a hopeful tone to the depressive history of racism and inequality in the United States. The other actors who appear give a performance like in a theatre, quoting diaries, books and speeches of famous people, but are dressed in their normal clothes, and that gives a poetic tone to the documentary. All the scholars who appear have very interesting things to say. Nevertheless, there is a couple of "activists" that talk a lot and don't know much, and that's a bit tiring. I rather hear erudite people that really know about the history of the United States talk than young angry activists.
Nevertheless, there are some very important voices that are silent here: 1) Native American men, women and children. I would have loved to learn more about their history and their suffering (they are also citizens of the US, thanks to the 14th Amendment, but have been denigrated always -still are- and it's very sad that their history is not told here). If the makers of this documentary wanted to focus only on African-Americans for the 3 first chapters (that's what they do), then they had to change the title of the documentary. 2) Other leaders and movements that were not pacifist but very important too in the Civil Rights movement, notably Malcolm X and the Black Panthers (I personally liked Malcolm X's philosophy more than Martin Luther King's). Why is he not in the documentary? (well, he appears 2 seconds with a quote about women in the 4th episode, but it's completely absent in episodes "Resistance" and "Wait"). It's funny, since I know that Will Smith has always been a fan of Malcolm X (he appears with many shirts of Malcolm X in The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, and also mentions a lot the Black Panthers). But since violence against violence is not politically correct, Malcom X's voice is missing.
Because of these two very important missing voices I give this awesome, poetic and brilliant documentary a 9 and not a 10.
I was very touched by the performances of Mahershala Ali and Samuel L. Jackson. And Will is an amazing host, interesting, funny, super handsome and cool, as always.
I watched this documentary series with my older children (who are teenagers). I'm Spanish and didn't know a lot of important details about the history of slavery, the Civil Rights movement in the US and the 14th Amendment. I'm grateful to you because we learnt a lot. Thanks a lot and many greetings from Madrid / Antonia
Nevertheless, there are some very important voices that are silent here: 1) Native American men, women and children. I would have loved to learn more about their history and their suffering (they are also citizens of the US, thanks to the 14th Amendment, but have been denigrated always -still are- and it's very sad that their history is not told here). If the makers of this documentary wanted to focus only on African-Americans for the 3 first chapters (that's what they do), then they had to change the title of the documentary. 2) Other leaders and movements that were not pacifist but very important too in the Civil Rights movement, notably Malcolm X and the Black Panthers (I personally liked Malcolm X's philosophy more than Martin Luther King's). Why is he not in the documentary? (well, he appears 2 seconds with a quote about women in the 4th episode, but it's completely absent in episodes "Resistance" and "Wait"). It's funny, since I know that Will Smith has always been a fan of Malcolm X (he appears with many shirts of Malcolm X in The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air, and also mentions a lot the Black Panthers). But since violence against violence is not politically correct, Malcom X's voice is missing.
Because of these two very important missing voices I give this awesome, poetic and brilliant documentary a 9 and not a 10.
I was very touched by the performances of Mahershala Ali and Samuel L. Jackson. And Will is an amazing host, interesting, funny, super handsome and cool, as always.
I watched this documentary series with my older children (who are teenagers). I'm Spanish and didn't know a lot of important details about the history of slavery, the Civil Rights movement in the US and the 14th Amendment. I'm grateful to you because we learnt a lot. Thanks a lot and many greetings from Madrid / Antonia
Well worth a watch to learn a little about how the constitution shaped citizenship.
I'm not an American, merely a fascinated observer who would love to see it overcome its social issues, especially as you guys are blessed with such an amazing landscape which you should be enjoying rather than fighting each other. I thought this series was timely, well-presented and thought-provoking. There was no "agenda", not in my humble opinion anyway. I think some people throw this term about without really thinking it through, as an attempt to discredit things they don't agree with. It's an attempt to silence or cover up very real issues and it's tragic that some people think like that really. Not everything is agenda; you can't revise or sugar-coat the past. Slavery and racism were very real, as are it's consequences which are still being felt today. The Native Americans were treated brutally. Prejudice, bigotry and all the nasty spin-offs that come with them are still in full bloom today, just as they were in the past. This is not agenda, it is fact, absolutely undisputed, no matter how many people put their heads in the sand.
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- QuizJoseph Gordon-Levitt puts voice to Andrew Johnson, Vice-President to Abraham Lincoln. In the movie Lincoln, he played Lincoln's son, Robert.
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By what name was Amend: alla conquista della libertà (2021) officially released in India in Hindi?
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