Post Classifieds

"Bully"

…More than a Movie

By Samantha Altman
On May 3, 2012

The documentary "Bully" came about like a thief in the night. Filmmakers Lee Hirsch and Cynthia Lowen made this film with the good intention of raising awareness about the problem of not only bullying but the lack of discipline that certain schools [do not] enforce on their students.

The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) released an R rating for the movie before its release due to harsh language. This caused a media backlash from filmmakers as well as parents and even celebrities to change it so children could see its amazing impact. After weeks of fighting, the MPAA made "Bully" unrated and let parents make up their own minds about letting their children see it.

I have to say, the filmmakers should be thankful that the MPAA caused so much media to get involved because otherwise, I don't know if the film would be so popular.

Being out of high school for some time now, my memories of classmates getting bullied are kind of a blur. After seeing this film, however, I am amazed at the lengths children will go to make themselves seem more powerful. The violence has definitely gotten more brutal and the verbal abuse children inflict on each other in the film is unbelievable.

The documentary follows 5 teenagers who each experience their own kind of daily torture from classmates. One boy hung himself at 17 years old because of the ridicule he faced every day. Another boy, 11, shot himself because he couldn't take the abuse. A girl, 14, gets so fed up that she brings a gun on the school bus to threaten the bullies to leave her alone. You get the idea.

The amazing thing about this film is its guts to go against the system. It shows countless evidence of school administration's neglect to protect their students. An assistant principal's sheer stupidity on the bullying in her own school is appalling. After a student goes up to her, holding the back of his bleeding head, he proceeds to tell her some kids pushed his head into a nail that was sticking out of the wall. Her response: "I bet you didn't like that, did you?" (I, personally, love my head to be shoved into a nail.) It is no wonder that the children in the film feel like they can't talk to anyone about getting bullied, because they feel nobody cares anyway. Which, unfortunately, I'm sure really happens in schools all around the world.

This is not your feel-good movie, or your kick ass special effects movie. It is, however, remarkably simple and its message speaks volumes to anyone who has ever been bullied or has been a bully themselves. I highly recommend it, but it is a tear jerker at times and does cause numerable counts of anger at school management and faculty members in the film.

 


Get Top Stories Delivered Weekly

More ucba-activist News Articles

Recent ucba-activist News Articles

Discuss This Article

MOST POPULAR UCBA-ACTIVIST

GET TOP STORIES DELIVERED WEEKLY

What do you think of the Irate8's demands?
Do you enjoy scripted TV (like WWE and "reality" shows)?
What do you think about the Umpqua shooting?
Are you familiar with UCBA's new Common Hour?
How far do you think the UC men's basketball team will go in the NCAA tournament this year?

FOLLOW OUR NEWSPAPER

Log In

or Create an account

Employers & Housing Providers

Employers can list job opportunities for students

Post a Job

Housing Providers can list available housing

Post Housing

Log In

Forgot your password?

Your new password has been sent to your email!

Logout Successful!

Please Select Your College/University:

You just missed it! This listing has been filled.

Post your own housing listing on Uloop and have students reach out to you!

Upload An Image

Please select an image to upload
Note: must be in .png, .gif or .jpg format
OR
Provide URL where image can be downloaded
Note: must be in .png, .gif or .jpg format