From left, Emma Stone, Octavia Spencer and Viola Davis in The Help.
From left, Emma Stone, Octavia Spencer and Viola Davis in The Help.
From left, Emma Stone, Octavia Spencer and Viola Davis in The Help.
From left, Emma Stone, Octavia Spencer and Viola Davis in The Help.

The Help


  • English
  • Arabic

The Help
Director: Tate Taylor
Starring: Emma Stone, Viola Davis, Octavia Spencer and Bryce Dallas Howard

Based on the best-selling book by Kathryn Stockett (who is best friends with the director), The Help is a colourful honeyed melodrama set in America's Deep South during the 1960s. Using the civil rights movement as a historical backdrop, the tale takes the focus away from those leading the struggle and zooms in on the African-American maids – the help – working in such a climate of racism. Their stories are enticed out by white do-gooder Skeeter (Stone), who has returned to her hometown from university with sharpened eyes, much to the dismay of her somewhat small-minded Stepford-like peers, led by the meticulously coiffed Hilly Holbrook (Dallas Howard), a woman pushing for the town's maids to use separate bathrooms. While Holbrook delivers teeth-clenching scenes, it's thankfully the maids themselves who take the central moments. Davis's Aibileen is the stoic, eye-rolling heroine, a woman who devoted more of her life to raising white children than her own, while Spencer's feisty Minny provides the climax's fist-pumping revenge. Overall, it's a very sugary take on a period of intense social upheaval that doesn't so much confront the issues as sentimentally bake them in one of Minny's famous pies. But as an enjoyable drama, it works immensely.