We live in a country with a lot of history, but a lot of times we forget who fought the way for us to be where we at right now. The film “Zoot Suit” directed by Luis Valdez took us to a whole different level of discrimination and racism back in the 1940s, when Latinos where been discriminated and marginalize by the police for the style they carried with them. “Zoot Suit” gives a brief overlook of what was the life of these pachucho men who were continuously oppressed by the police but to be more specific by the government. The film itself involves a lot of politics, Henry who is the main protagonist of the film, he and his friends got sent to prison because they were accused of murder in the first and second degree without any evidence. In the film “Zoot Suit” directed by Luis Valdez there’s …show more content…
Films like “Zoot Suit” are release to the public to teach them some history about the oppression that Latinos were facing as Ramirez Berg mention the main goal of the Latino Cinema “its audience was La Raza, the Mexican Americans in the United States, and its goals were to (a) decolonize consciousness, (b) educate us Chicanos about our heritage, (c) give voice to our silenced history, (d) instill ethnic pride by celebrating our culture, (e) mold a self-determined identity, (f) expose the conditions of our oppression, and (g) mobilize La Raza politically, socially, and culturally” (Ramirez Berg p.186). Ramirez Berg highlights the importance and goal of the Latino cinema, it’s to help Latinos come out of their shadow, teach others the oppression they face on a daily nationwide. Throughout the film, we saw the narrator adding music and singing to the film like if it was a play, which is good because it gives a different aspect to the film. Most of the film was serious but the narrator helps with his singing to make this film unique and also to send a message with his