Went to see it last night at our local Cinéclub- unfortunately in French (hate to hear well known actors with the 'wrong' voice/intonation)- as others said, very powerful. Our youngest daughter always says she is not a feminist, blabla- but I wish she would see it. She is strong and independent- but I know she would have hated to not be able to own her own money, property, her own children even... and doesn't bear thinking about the huge power the bosses had on the women workers- and what was 'expected' - and then to watch your own daughter replace you in that 'rôle' in the back office once you'd got past it.
Made us think about 'terrorists' too- like them and of course Mandela- what other ways do you have to fight when you have no rights, no power, nothing... but to fight with whatever you can? I often ask myself the question- if I had lived under the Apartheid movement in South Africa (which my husban's family escaped, just in time) as an African- or if I lived in Gazza now- what would I do??? Nobody can tell- but I think I'd fight for my rights, my people, my future and that of my family.