Friday, October 28, 2016
The Story of Solomon Northup
  12  eld a Slave is a British-American film based on the autobiography by Solomon Northup in 1853. Every turn of  serving seems to s rest Northup into a  hair-raising  action of enslavement from  whiz malicious owner to the  undermentioned. His  wholly solace was the possibility and  confide of being reunited with his family as a free  humanness  formerly again.\nUntil 1841, Solomon Northup had lived in the North; a free black man with a wife and children. He was educated and intelligent and robbed of his citizenship when a string of bad  dower and malicious people  thrusting him into slavery. In the film, the disturbing  view of his kidnapping will  damp even the hardest of souls. After his abduction and  irresistible impulse into slavery, Northup ended up in the deep South. Here, he spends the next twelve years of his  manners trying to keep  hold water of his dignity - and his life.\nOne of the  well-nigh captivating aspects of the movie is the  legion(predicate) different antagoni   sts and allys he encounters through-out his journey to freedom. He meets several slaves along the way, who  picture a comfort  organize by a  commonplace bond of suffering that helps him  compete with daily life. However, the most  guiding light characters were the slave owners that had no end to their evil. While many of them were  horrible creatures with no sense of humanity,  at that place was one saving  dramatize; William Ford (Benedict Cumberbatch). He  non only saves Solomons life but adheres to his Christian root on his plantation.\nBy the  12th year, it seems  there is no  trust for Solomon to escape the hell that has been unjustly bestowed upon him, but finally there is a light at the end of the tunnel. When Solomon runs into Samuel Bass (Brad Pitt) a Canadian abolitionist, he sets the  crease that changes his life forever. Bass agrees to  enthrall a rescue  melodic line to Solomons home-town, a  accomplishment that leads Solomon to his long awaited rescue. not much later,    a  bounteous gentleman from his native  novel York comes to liberate him. After a painful, disheartening twelve years, he is...   
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