Imdb Mona Lisa Smile Direct

Imdb Mona Lisa Smile Direct

“The real scandal isn’t the movie. It’s what the movie leaves out. The real Wellesley in the 50s had queer students, communist sympathizers, brilliant Black women who weren’t just ‘the maid in the background.’ The film’s feminism is white, upper-class, and narrow. But you know what? My grandmother, who was a Black maid at Wellesley in 1953, loved this film. She said, ‘It was the first time I saw a white woman on screen admit she was lonely.’ Sometimes, a narrow door is still a door.”

“I saw this in theaters in 2003. I was 41, a divorced mother of two, working as a secretary. My own mother, a Wellesley graduate of 1956, had just passed. I took her pearl necklace to the showing. When Julia Roberts’ character, Katherine Watson, says, ‘I thought I was headed to a place where I could make a difference,’ I sobbed. My mother never became a lawyer. She became a hostess. She told me the happiest day of her life was her wedding. I never believed her. But after the movie, I held her pearls and wondered: what if her smile, like the Mona Lisa’s, wasn’t a performance? What if it was real, and I just refused to see it?” Imdb Mona Lisa Smile

The first review, five stars, was from a user named : “The real scandal isn’t the movie