It’s the final scene, a very poetic scene that closes the intense movie called Suffragette.
Maud Watts (Carey Mulligan), a female worker in a laundry factory, is small, weak, scared and diligent at work.
Maud, from what she saw, from coincidences and even pressures in her personal life, boldly stood up to fight for the future rights of women, including her daughter if she were born.
Just like how they gently nurture and care for their families, women in the struggle are also gentle and patient.
Even more extreme, she called: “We do not want to be law breakers, but to become law makers.
Cinema has no shortage of films like Suffragette, and women like Maud Watts who dared to stand up against an entire system of injustice.
In 1558, Elizabeth I ascended the throne when England was divided and the political situation was extremely complicated.
The movie Norma Rae is based on the true story of single mother Crystal Lee Sutton, a textile factory worker in Roanoke Rapids, N.C.
For more than two centuries of fighting to recognize legitimate rights for themselves and, more importantly, for the future of the next generations, women are increasingly asserting their role and position in many fields.
Real lives inspired films.
__
See more:
12 cinematic movie frames come to life
Movies portray fashion through each decade
3 reasons to explain the rise of fairy tales in movies