A cotton coach can see the fact that he wants to play football for him in Michael and helps him learn his study. Michael 's science teacher, Boswell, helped Michael complete his course, and to some extent, Michael was the voice of another teacher. In this movie, there is no meeting between Leigh Anne and Ms. Boswell, but it is certain that they are allies. Leian hired Miss Su when Michael needed a mentor to help raise his GPA. Even after Michael graduated from Wingate, Miss Sue was still standing next to Riley Ann and Michael.
Leigh Anne Touhy is a fictitious person in real life of Leigh Anne, foster mother of Michael Oher famous for the 2009 movie The Blind Side. Leigh Anne is a white interior designer living in the south, with a husband and two children. This family is considered a member of the upper class and earns money by possessing various fast food chains. Lee Ann and her family organized a black homeless boy, Michael, and experienced an increasing number of love and relationships throughout the film. They eventually adopted Michael, and Lee Annan became a fierce protective mother. A little about her growth experience ... show more
Just after almost all students entered the White Christian High School, Aelle met a classmate classmate Lee Anne Tui, a calm giant of homeless who was alienated and uneducated. He is a serious mother. On a cold evening, Touhy invited her to stay at home, soon afterwards he trained him as a member and led him to the way to a football scholarship. Mother-child relationship, which is quiet and uninteresting, is the most authentic part of the movie, and several early scenes touch the mind. Despite the wonderful country accent, Brock is very funny, because the small but powerful southern beauty wears designer pants inside her family and shakes her maternal instinct like a weapon .
In the movie there is a scene that made the best use of the rich possibilities of this storytelling, but it is Sandra Bullock, Lee Anne Twee, her comment about her newly adopted son, with her It is time to comment It will become their own racial discrimination. She let them catch a cold and said to them: "Shame!" This is an extraordinary movie moment in many ways. First of all, it clearly shows that white people (white women in this case) participate in behind-the-scenes behavior that we often talk about in blogs. It is rare to see white people talking clearly about race in movies. The confrontation with the block with them is also refreshing, but it is a slump and can not be found because of her role. How do you deal with her role in the internalization of racial discrimination - or even if she already has - nothing about conflict with her lunch friends. Does she have contradiction? Did she always wanted to talk to them about their racial discrimination? If so, is it painful?