Below you will find the handout I distributed in class today--a synopsis of the film we viewed and a set of seven discussion questions.
Please come to class tomorrow prepared to address these questions in a class discussion.
Also, a few quick reminders:
1. no class on Friday
2. you may revise out of class essays 1 and 2 only, not out of class essay 3. You may revise essays 1 and 2 AS MANY TIMES AS YOU WISH until you are happy with your score.
English 1A, C. Fraga----About
the Film--Daughter from Danang (2002)
This documentary often upsets the viewers’
expectations of happily-ever-afters.
It is a riveting emotional drama of longing for home, grappling with
identity issues, and witnessing the personal legacy of war.
To all outward
appearances, Heidi is the proverbial “all-American girl”, hailing from small
town Pulaski, Tenn. But her birth name was Mai Thi Hiep. Born in Danang,
Vietnam in 1968, she’s the mixed-race daughter of an American serviceman and a
Vietnamese woman. Fearing for her daughter’s safety at the war’s end, Hiep’s
mother sent her to the U.S. on “Operation Babylift”, a Ford administration plan
to relocate orphans and mixed-race children to the U.S. for adoption before
they fell victim to a frighteningly uncertain future in Vietnam after the
Americans pulled out. Mother and daughter would know nothing about each other for 22 years.
Now, as if by a miracle, they are reunited in Danang. But what seems like the cure for a happy ending is anything but. Heidi and her Vietnamese relatives find themselves caught in a confusing clash of cultures and at the mercy of conflicting emotions that will change their lives and their definition of home forever. Through intimate and sometimes excruciating moments, Daughter from Danang profoundly shows how wide the chasms of cultural difference and how deep the wounds of war can run--even within one family. Winner of the Grand Jury Prize for Best Documentary at the 2002 Sundance Film Festival.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS---THINGS TO THINK ABOUT
1. One reviewer describes the film
as a “gut-wrenching examination of the way cultural differences and emotional
expectations collide.” Would you agree this is an accurate description? Why or
why not? Explain specifically.
2. Were there parts of the film
that made you feel uncomfortable? If so, what were those parts and can you
articulate why they made you feel uncomfortable?
3. Heidi acutely feels that she has
been rejected by two mothers: her birth mother who gave her up and her
Tennessee mother, whose cold, untouching demeanor drove a wedge between them.
How does this fact impact Heidi and what she ultimately experiences when she
returns to Vietnam?
4. The film is considered a very
powerful one by many other small filmmakers as well as many reviewers. In your
opinion, what makes this an effective or ineffective film?
5. What preconceived ideas about
home are proven inaccurate after viewing the film?
6. In an interview with the
filmmakers, they admit that when they decided to film Heidi’s return to
Vietnam, they assumed that the reunion would be a healing story, a kind of full
circle coming home. The war in Vietnam was long over and they felt they could
create a film that would ease the collective pain that is still connected to
the war. Instead, what they did discover?
7. Some viewers have condemned
Heidi for representing an aspect of American culture that they believe is
selfish and individualized. What do you think and feel about Heidi’s reaction
for the family’s request for money?
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