Crash Movie Review & Film Summary (2005) | Roger Ebert
Because we care about the characters, the movie is uncanny in its ability to rope us in and get us involved.
-I agree, you get the feels from there situations and you can relate to their problems and conflicts. ludicrous and his black friend talk about how they get stereotyped based on their looks everywhere they go. They blame the white and complain about it,but continue to make bad decisions and fulfill that stereo type thinking there isn't nothing they can do to change it but to just be it. The Mexican in the movie also gets stereo typed buy the wife after they get robbed because of his appearance and the tattoos …show more content…
The racist cop starts of by discriminating the blacks and the TV directors wife. but by the end he saves her life from the car fire and doesn't disrespect her. Ludicrous steals the van and finds out he can sell all the illegal immigrants to a sex trade but decides to set them free and let them start there lives even though it benefits him in no way besides the good feeling of the doing the right thing.The white wife is at first rude to her Mexican maid but at the end she tells her she is her real best friend and realizes she isn't a threat like she stereo typed Mexicans before.
Crash Movie Review & Film Summary (2005) | Roger Ebert
For me, the strongest performance is by Matt Dillon, as the racist cop in anguish over his father. He makes an unnecessary traffic stop when he thinks he sees the black TV director and his light-
he did a good job playing his character but it pissed me off when he did what he did to the TV directors wife. HE showed his racist side threw out most of the movie but by the end he changed a tinsy