Bring It On Movie Analysis

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Bring it On: All or Nothing The film I chose to watch is the third installment of the Bring It On series, which are all mostly unrelated stories loosely held together by the thread of cheerleading as a main plot point. I went with the third movie, released in 2006, because it attempts to have something to say about race, and was actually written by a black woman, though whether it survived rewrites and succeeds or not is to be questioned later. The basic plot is that the lead character, Britney, is the captain of the cheerleading squad at a very white, suburban school called Pacific Vista. There are three key characters of that squad; Brianna, who is constantly called fat when she can’t be over 120 pounds; Amber, Britney’s best friend on the team and the only Asian man cast member; and most importantly, Winnie. Winnie is the “backstabbing frenemy” character who is always trying to undermine Britney despite the fact that they’re supposed to be friends. Britney’s father loses his well-paying job and their family has to move to “the other side of the tracks” and Britney must leave her squad and boyfriend, Brad, behind for Crenshaw Heights. To keep it short, she has a difficult time adjusting to a mostly black school that has high security and so little funding …show more content…

Britney is not necessarily racist at the beginning, but she is ignorant and must be educated by her black teammates on certain cultural things she hadn’t thought of before. Winnie is outwardly racist, and it actually causes Pacific Vista to lose the competition at the end because she calls Crenshaw Heights “ghetto” to Rhianna. In the end, the black underdogs win, and while clumsy, the moral of the story is “racism is bad.”. In several regards, the movie succeeds; it is sympathetic and realistic to a black experience, but unfortunately its downfall is it still has to be viewed through a white POV

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