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Wednesday, December 18, 2013

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The Help stars Emma Stone as Skeeter, Viola Davis as Aibileen and Octavia Spencer as Minny-three very different, extraordinary women in Mississippi during the 1960s, who build an unlikely friendship around a secret writing project that breaks societal rules and puts them all at risk. From their improbable alliance a remarkable sisterhood emerges, instilling all of them with the courage to transcend the lines that define them, and the realization that sometimes those lines are made to be crossed-even if it means bringing everyone in town face-to-face with the changing times. -- (C) DreamWorks

Movie Title : The Help
Release Date : Aug 10, 2011 Wide
Genre Movie :Drama
Mpaa Rating : PG-13
Actors :Viola Davis,Emma Stone,Bryce Dallas Howard,Octavia L. Spencer,Jessica Chastain,Ahna O'Reilly,Allison Janney,Anna Camp,Eleanor Henry,Emma Henry,Chris Lowell,Cicely Tyson,Mike Vogel,Sissy Spacek,Brian Kerwin,Wes Chatham,Aunjanue Ellis,Ted Welch,Shane McRae,Roslyn Ruff


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Visitor Ranting & Critics For The Help

User Ranting Movie The Help : 4.2
User Count Like for The Help : 99,546
Critics Ranting For The Help : 7.1
Critics Percentage For The Help : 76 %

Trailer For The Help

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Review For Movie The Help
Yes, it gets a bit sentimental. Yes, some 'Ya-Ya Sisterhood' friendship clichés creep in. Yes, it glosses history. But it's also heartfelt, hilarious and the cast is a dream-team topped by Viola Davis.
Cath Clarke-Time Out

"The Help" takes us on a pop-cultural tour that savors the picturesque, and strengthens stereotypes it purports to shatter.
Joe Morgenstern-Wall Street Journal

Thanks to a talented cast -- starting with leads Emma Stone, Viola Davis​ and Octavia Spencer​ -- the movie is often entertaining. But The Help should have been challenging too.
Lisa Kennedy-Denver Post

As in many reductive period pieces, there are no real characters here, just archetypes, namely reactionary cretins and sensitive souls who anticipate modern attitudes.
Ben Sachs-Chicago Reader

The Help is a high-functioning tearjerker, but the catharsis it offers feels glib and insufficient, a Barbie Band-Aid on the still-raw wound of race relations in America.
Dana Stevens-Slate

[The Help] is, in some ways, crude and obvious, but it opens up a broad new swath of experience on the screen, and parts of it are so moving and well acted that any objections to what's second-rate seem to matter less as the movie goes on.
David Denby-New Yorker

Lifetime Channel movie with paternalistic liberalism bordering on Paula Deen malignity.
Louis Proyect-rec.arts.movies.reviews

A great story and a wonderful cast combine to make this drama a must-see.
John Hanlon-Big Hollywood

If you think the summer has been lacking in sophisticated adult entertainment, don't worry, 'The Help' is on the way.
Al Alexander-The Patriot Ledger

Outstanding performances and a delicate approach to racial tensions make this film a cut above other inspirational period dramas.
Amy Curtis-We Got This Covered

Transcends its comfort-food-for-Oprah's Book Club wrapping to get at something deeper, the gray in a story that seems so far removed as to be utterly black and white."
Roger Moore-McClatchy-Tribune News Service

Octavia Spencer's Minny provides the movie's funniest moments, especially when she gets her own back on former employer Hilly with an audacious reprisal that proves that revenge is indeed a dish best served cold.
Jason Best-Movie Talk

La película realmente triunfa en la exploración de la complicidad y solidaridad que se establece entre mujeres solas, quebradas, necesitadas de oportunidades e inconformes con los moldes sociales preestablecidos.
Enrique Buchichio-Uruguay Total

I found it surprisingly enjoyable. And I suppose that's the greatest compliment I could give the film: I didn't hate it, even if I was dreading it going in.
Kevin Carr-7M Pictures

A quiet but powerful film that really does have Oscar written all over it.
James Plath-Movie Metropolis

Aimed at heart and conscience, novel and film have their overdone moments but remain worthy of close attention.
Donald J. Levit-ReelTalk Movie Reviews

Brimming with believable, likeable women characters and set against the turbulence of Mississippi in the 1960s, 'The Help' is almost as good as Kathryn Stockett's novel.
Linda Cook-KWQC-TV (Iowa)

"The Help" is refreshing and possibly the best film of the year.
Jolene Mendez-Entertainment Spectrum

To "the help," the possibility of the children growing up as clones of their parents isn't a consideration. It's all about loving the innocent. But, it's a dilemma.
Jules Brenner-Cinema Signals

This is a generally family-friendly affair which isn't interested in getting its hands too dirty.
Martin Roberts-Fan The Fire

Some will scoff that it covers familiar territory or that the message should have been angrier and louder...but there is beauty in its lack of heavy handed sermonizing.
Bruce Bennett-Spectrum (St. George, Utah)

As hard to dislike as it is to truly admire, this artfully manipulative issue movie knows where its strengths lie... and most of them lie in Viola Davis.
-Film4

A faithful, heart-warming adaptation that will satisfy fans of the book, divert the uninitiated and tickle the Academy's fancy.
Jane Crowther-Total Film

The movie is facile, not a little patronising, and it ends up as crude and sentimental.
Philip French-Observer [UK]

This coming of age tale is deeply affecting, magnificently acted and truly enlightening ... are truly inspirational women who are an absolute joy to spend time with.
Lisa Giles-Keddie-Real.com

I was disappointed at the end to realize the picture was fiction not fact but perhaps that's a tribute to the authenticity writer-director Tate Taylor achieves in this beautifully realized picture.
Henry Fitzherbert-Daily Express

Movie Images The Help
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Movie Overview For The Help

Aibileen Clark (Viola Davis) is a middle-aged African-American maid who has spent her life raising white children and has recently lost her only son; Minny Jackson (Octavia Spencer) is an African-American maid who has often offended her employers despite her family's struggles with money and her desperate need for jobs; and Eugenia "Skeeter" Phelan (Emma Stone) is a young white woman who has recently moved back home after graduating college to find out her childhood maid has mysteriously disappeared. These three stories intertwine to explain how life in Jackson, Mississippi revolves around "the help"; yet they are always kept at a certain distance because of racial lines.

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TagLine The Help Change begins with a whisper.

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