Help
Viola Davis Actor , Emma Stone Actor , Bryce Dallas Howard Actor , Octavia L. Spencer Actor , Jessica Chastain Actor
MPAA Rating: PG13
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Help
Theatrical Release Date: 2011 08 10 (USA)
UPC: 786936814309
Studio: Touchstone/Disney
MPAA Rating: PG13 Contains:null
Summary: A 1960s-era Mississippi debutante sends her community into an uproar by conducting a series of probing interviews with the black servants behind some of her community's most prominent families. Skeeter (Emma Stone) has just graduated from college, and she's eager to launch her career as a writer. In a moment of inspiration, Skeeter decides to focus her attention on the black female servants who work in her community. Her first subject is Aibileen (Viola Davis), the devoted housekeeper who has been employed by Skeeter's best friend's family for years. By speaking with Aibileen, Skeeter becomes an object of scorn to the wealthy locals, who view her actions as directly challenging to the established social order. Before long, even more servants are coming forward to tell their stories, and Skeeter discovers that friendship can blossom under the most unlikely of circumstances. Bryce Dallas Howard co-stars in a touching tale of race relations based on author Kathryn Stockett's best-selling novel of the same name. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
Category: Drama
Awards: Best Supporting Actress – New York Film Critics Circle Best Ensemble – National Board of Review Best Actress – Detroit Film Critics Society Breakthrough Performer – New York Film Critics Online Best Supporting Actress – L.A. Film Critics Association Best Supporting Actress – Detroit Film Critics Society Best Ensemble – Detroit Film Critics Society Top Ten Film of the Year – New York Film Critics Online Best Acting Ensemble – Broadcast Film Critics Association Best Song – Broadcast Film Critics Association Best Picture – Broadcast Film Critics Association Best Actress – Broadcast Film Critics Association Best Supporting Actress – Broadcast Film Critics Association Best Supporting Actress – Broadcast Film Critics Association Best Adapted Screenplay – Broadcast Film Critics Association Best Costume Design – Broadcast Film Critics Association Best Song – Broadcast Film Critics Association Best Supporting Actress – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Song – Broadcast Film Critics Association Best Supporting Actress – Screen Actors Guild Best Ensemble – Screen Actors Guild Best Supporting Actress – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best Ensemble – Screen Actors Guild Best Ensemble – Screen Actors Guild Best Ensemble – Screen Actors Guild Best Ensemble – Screen Actors Guild Best Ensemble – Screen Actors Guild Best Ensemble – Screen Actors Guild Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in a Moti – Hollywood Foreign Press Association Best Original Song – Hollywood Foreign Press Association Best Actress - Drama – Hollywood Foreign Press Association Best Supporting Actress – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best Original Song – Hollywood Foreign Press Association Best Adapted Screenplay – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best Original Song – Hollywood Foreign Press Association Best Original Song – Hollywood Foreign Press Association Best Picture - Drama – Hollywood Foreign Press Association Breakthrough Performance – Detroit Film Critics Society Best Adapted Screenplay – Writers Guild of America Best Picture – Producers Guild of America Best Art Direction in a Period Film – Art Directors Guild Best Supporting Actress – National Society of Film Critics Best Picture – Producers Guild of America Best Picture – Producers Guild of America Best Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in a Moti – Hollywood Foreign Press Association Best Actress – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best Picture – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best Supporting Actress – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Picture – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Picture – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Actress – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Picture – Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Best Ensemble – Screen Actors Guild Best Ensemble – Screen Actors Guild Best Supporting Actress – Screen Actors Guild Best Actress – Screen Actors Guild Best Ensemble – Screen Actors Guild Best Ensemble – Screen Actors Guild Best Ensemble – Screen Actors Guild
Features:
Deleted scenes
Mary J. Blige's "The Living Proof" music video
Help
Format: DVD
Release Date: 12/06/2011
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Theatre Wide-Screen
Audio: DD5.1 Dolby Digital 5.1, DD2 Dolby Digital Stereo
Runtime: 146 Minutes
Sides: 1
Number of Discs: 1
Language(s) English,French,Spanish
Subtitles: French,Spanish
Region: USA & territories, Canada
Chapters:
Disc #1 -- Help
1. The Help [9:39]
2. Bridge Club [8:13]
3. Skeeter [8:06]
4. The Storm [7:41]
5. Courage [12:22]
6. Minny's New Job [6:53]
7. Not Good Enough [11:12]
8. Separate, But Equal [15:36]
9. More Stories [7:17]
10. Terrible Awful [4:06]
11. Benefit Dinner [9:39]
12. One More Story [7:15]
13. The Book [7:03]
14. Thank You [8:29]
15. The Truth [9:02]
16. End Credits [5:44]
Alaina O'Connor
The civil rights melodrama The Help is based on Kathryn Stockett's popular novel of the same name. The story takes place in 1963 Jackson, MS, where Aibileen Clark (Viola Davis) is a middle-aged black maid who recently lost her only son. From the opening moments of the film she explains that she's raised 17 white children in her lifetime -- the irony being that these children grow up and eventually disregard those who truly raised them. Minny Jackson (Octavia Spencer) is a black maid whose outspokenness has given her a reputation for being a difficult employee, and Eugenia "Skeeter" Phelan (Emma Stone) is a young white woman who has recently moved back home after graduating from college, only to find that her beloved childhood maid is gone and her mother won't give her a straight answer about what happened. Skeeter dreams of becoming a reporter and contacts Elaine Stein (Mary Steenburgen), a New York editor who isn't convinced of Skeeter's talent and instructs her to gain more experience before joining the big league. So Skeeter gets a job at the local newspaper writing a housecleaning column. But she sets her sights higher and pitches a book idea revolving around "the help" -- a collection of stories from a maid's perspective. She enlists Aibileen, who bravely agrees to tell her story to Skeeter, knowing that it could potentially put her life in danger. Skeeter's secret book project has fits and starts; the most challenging is a call for more maids to participate, and for Skeeter to tell the real story about her beloved nanny, Constantine (Cicely Tyson). As in the novel, the villain of the film is the vicious Hilly Holbrook (Bryce Dallas Howard), who takes what almost seems like pleasure in seeing the help suffer. She leads a degrading "Home Help Sanitation Initiative," which requires Southern white homes to build what is essentially an outhouse for their help in order to maintain "sanitary" conditions. Much of the humor of the film comes from the give-and-take between Minny and Hilly, and when Skeeter's relationship with the maids becomes a little too familiar, Hilly, along with her circle of bridge-playing girlfriends, attempts to rein in her activism. The performances are uniformly excellent, especially from Davis and Spencer, who are the soul of the film, bringing their characters a dignity and fullness far beyond the novel, while Emma Stone is winning and comforting as the cute yet fiercely determined Skeeter, whose untamable curly hair is an all too blatant sign of her rebellious nature. Still, despite writer/director Tate Taylor's intimate knowledge of the novel (he's close friends with Stockett), he has trouble maintaining focus and bounces from one character to the next without regard to the overall story. While the bulk of the narrative revolves around Skeeter, Aibileen, and the book, there are several side plots -- a brush with romance in which Skeeter dates a handsome oil industry comer (Chris Lowell) and the story of Yule Mae (Aunjanue Ellis), a maid working for Hilly, who is refused the small loan she needs to help send her sons to college and is later arrested upon suspicion of theft -- that seem to be haphazardly thrown in without any regard to pacing or continuity, which works well in a novel but is difficult to translate to film. The supporting actors breathe life into the novel's characters, notably Allison Janney as Skeeter's socially timid mother, Sissy Spacek as Hilly's slightly addled mother, and Jessica Chastain as outsider Celia Foote, a bottle blond hated by Hilly's circle of friends. Overall, The Help is a poignant period piece that examines the unquestioned relationships of white socialites and their deferential black maids, and transforms an ugly period of American history into a hopeful future. ~ Alaina O'Connor, Rovi
Cast and Crew:
Chris Columbus
Producer
Thomas Newman
Composer (Music Score)
Mark A. Radcliffe
Executive Producer
Michael Barnathan
Producer
Jeff Skoll
Executive Producer
Tate Taylor
Director
Tate Taylor
Executive Producer
Tate Taylor
Screenwriter
Nate Berkus
Executive Producer
Brunson Green
Producer
Jennifer Blum
Executive Producer
Mohamed Khalef Al-Mazrouei
Executive Producer
Dean Jones
Executive Producer
Viola Davis
Actor
Emma Stone
Actor
Bryce Dallas Howard
Actor
Octavia L. Spencer
Actor
Jessica Chastain
Actor
Ahna O'Reilly
Actor
Allison Janney
Actor
Anna Camp
Actor
Eleanor Henry
Actor
Emma Henry
Actor
Chris Lowell
Actor
Cicely Tyson
Actor
Mike Vogel
Actor
Sissy Spacek
Actor
Brian Kerwin
Actor
Wes Chatham
Actor
Aunjanue Ellis
Actor
Ted Welch
Actor
Shane McRae
Actor
Roslyn Ruff
Actor
Tarra Riggs
Actor
Leslie Jordan
Actor
Mary Steenburgen
Actor
Tiffany Brouwer
Actor
Carol Lee
Actor
Carol Sutton
Actor
Millicent Bolton
Actor
Ashley Johnson
Actor
Ritchie Montgomery
Actor
Country: USA

