A few years pass from the first
part to the second. By then, Katie’s child is born, Brian returns from his
service in the Marines, and Michael is involved in running Robert Kennedy’s
presidential campaign. Michael also has
lost Sarah to another political activist.
Sarah
begins to notice that she is being unappreciated with her current partner; she
demands to be treated equally, she wants to lead with him, not one step
behind. On one protest broadcasted
through television, Michael sees how Sarah is being arrested while trying to speak
to some journalists with microphones.
Michael
is involved in Kennedy’s campaign, and as part of this, he is collecting
signatures to bring back all the troops fighting in the Vietnam War. While on his job, he goes to his parents’
house. And he asks his mother if he
would sign. She tells him that his father
does not agree with this. When the
father arrives, the mother agrees to sign the petition to get the troops back
from the war, and she faces her husband saying that she respects him, but that
she also has a say in the house which he needs to respect.
Brian
returns traumatized because of the war.
He struggles with getting back into society as a normal person. His father allows him to drink and do what he
wants because there he feels sorry that he had to go through all that
trauma. Because there is no real
treatment for these people that are psychologically unstable, Brian obtains no
help from society.
Katie
has brought up his child, and at one point attends a Woodstock Festival where
she is to be reunited with her two brothers.
All three return home and begin to live as a family once again.
The
father throughout the whole miniseries plays the part of the society that does
not accept change. He is reluctant to accept what does not go as he had first
thought, and he is the reason for Katie leaving home, Michael leaving home to
work for Kennedy. The father eventually
accepts and apologizes to his daughter even though he admits that it is very
hard for him to do so.
Emmet,
has grown up since his father died. He has joined the revolutionary group, the Black
Panthers, and is willing to fight with arms to get their rights as
Americans. While talking with Fred
Hampton, he reveals to him that it is better to be peaceful than to raise
arms. While reflecting on this, he
visits his father’s grave and promises to continue the fight how he fought,
with peaceful protests.
The
miniseries finishes with both families, the Taylors and the Herlihys, living
happily in the American society. Although
society still faces social problems, discrimination and racism, they families
are at peace with themselves and accept each other.
This story has many themes that one can analyze and by narrating the events the reader can understand them better. For a future post about this story (if any), it would be nice to go deeper into those themes. Keep up the good work!
ReplyDeleteI like how you presented the themes in this post. Like Crystal said above, going deeper would be a way of helping the reader understand things better.
ReplyDeleteI would like to know if you think that discrimination in the movie affect the characters in their lives? Have a nice day!
ReplyDeleteThe families accept each other? I dont remember this.
ReplyDeleteSorry if you understood that both families accept each other. What I meant is that Emmett accepts to follow in his fathers footsteps; and in the Herlihy family the father now accepts his children for who they are. An example of this is the final scene of the Herlihy family when they are having a BBQ. The father, at this point, apologizes to Katie for the way he responded. Then Sarah arrives and meets the family. Here, the father makes a comment about Sarah's last name, Winestock. But at this point we understand that discrimination is something they have overcome.
DeleteHello Nicolas! Again this is a very good overview of the series but I find it making your opinion on... anything about it... just a thought.
ReplyDelete~~~Paula