What is your opinion on 'Price Of Free'
Answers
answers of the questions is I don't no sorry
Answer:
Explanation:
Even an extraordinary person doesn’t necessarily make for a dynamic movie subject. That appears to the case with Kailash Satyarthi, an activist in India who was one of two Nobel Peace Prize winners in 2014 and has devoted his career to rescuing children working as factory slaves. He is the focus of “The Price of Free,” a routine awareness documentary.
It is difficult to argue with the premises that child labor is wrong; that everyone deserves an education; and that persons who risk their lives to rescue trafficked children — as we see Satyarthi and others in his organization, Bachpan Bachao Andolan, doing in the film — are selfless and worthy of the world’s attention. But because of this, watching “The Price of Free” is largely a process of nodding in agreement.
The director, Derek Doneen, adds a bit of striking animation for flashbacks, and there are a few strands that generate tension. A village head arrives at Satyarthi’s ashram to retrieve rescued children, ostensibly to return them to their homes; Satyarthi is duly skeptical. And the film focuses with particular intensity — with the help of clandestinely shot footage — on the search for one boy named Sonu.
Mostly, however, “The Price of Free” is interested in spreading the word about Satyarthi’s work, both in India and globally, and in getting consumers to approach what they buy with a critical eye, so as not to support child labor. That’s an important message, and it’s not essential to watch the movie to receive it.
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