Wednesday, January 22, 2020
Movie Review: Yentl Essay -- essays research papers
 Movie Review: Yentl           Everyone at one time or another has felt out of place. Feeling unsure  of one's place in society is an experience that every young adult faces but  deals with differently. Some rebel while others comply with whatever has been  set out for them by society or their parents, or both. The role of the woman in  society is forever changing. Where women were once obligated to stay in the  home and dote on their husbands, they are now working in the same types of jobs  as their husbands. What was typically the male role has been blurred and  practically obliterated. Religious roles have followed society's lead in their  evolution. For example, since its creation over five thousand years ago, the  Jewish religion has evolved in some movements to involve women and men equally  in ceremonies. The orthodox movement has always remained traditional in its  belief that women have their place in the home, cooking and raising children,  and serving their husbands. Education remains the man's duty. The movie Yentl  starring Barbara Streisand, shows this traditional belief through its plot,  characterization, music, lights, camera angles, and symbolism.       Set in Eastern Europe in 1904, Yentl captures the essence of the Jewish  woman's eternal struggle. It is the story of a young girl, in love with  learning but forbidden to do so by Jewish tradition. Upon her father's death,  Yentl disguises herself as a boy to attend a yeshiva (religious school) and  continue her studies. She befriends Avigdor, a male scholar at the yeshiva,  and falls in love with him. Driven by her love for him, Yentl will do all that  she can to ensure that he is near her and that her secret is not revealed.  Yentl struggles with her secret until the day she can no longer remain silent.  She tells Avigdor what she has done, and of her love for him, but he cannot  accept a woman who refuses to act as a traditional woman should. So Yentl  departs for America in hope of a different mentality, but never forgetting her  love for Avigdor and all that she has learned.       Based on Isaac Bashevis Singer's acclaimed short story, "Yentl, the  Yeshiva Boy," the story is somewhat unrealistic but serves its purpose in  proving a point; the point being that women have always been just as capable as  men in studying and education, an...              ...e  bird, is able to soar - through the prejudices of her traditions and through the  world of knowledge for which she so longs. She displays this thought in the  last line of the movie when she sings "Papa watch me fly." As well, when Yentl  transforms herself into Anshel, the boy, she looks at herself in a cracked  mirror and cuts her hair. This displays her uncertainty of herself and her  place in Jewish society, and the cutting of her hair symbolizes her  transformation and the beginning of a new life for her. Symbolism throughout  the film, contributes to the film's theme of self-discovery and role reversal.       The plot, characterization, lighting, camera angles, and symbolism  reveal thoroughly the plot of this highly thought-evoking film. The plot mainly  contributes to proving that a woman's place is not solely in the home. That  "story books for women, sacred books for men", as the bookseller says at the  beginning of the story, is not an accurate assessment of a woman's intellectual  capabilities. Because of Barbara Streisand's fabulous and complete  characterization of Yentl, this movie comes to life and touches the hearts of  its viewers.                       
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