British youth is a topic that is touched on or strongly addressed in all three of these films. Bend it like Beckham, which is set in 2005 and is modern to the time it was made, shows the youth in mostly a good light as it follows Jess’ journey to follow her dreams despite her family being against her. Jess is a strong female protagonist and having grown up in a traditional Sikh family in Hounslow, she struggles between maintaining her roots and keeping up with the modern culture of British teenagers. Jess is strong minded and determined, and although the audience is always on her side throughout the film, she is also seen to lie to her parents and go behind their backs. Also, the other three Asian girls that where shorts skirts and crop tops portray a less positive few of British teenagers as they boast about having ‘slept with half of Hounslow. This portrayal is also seen in Fish Tank, although to a much bigger extreme. Mia, who grew up in a council estate is the protagonist in this film and although the teenage girl is out of control, the audience cannot help but feel that this is not her fault but the fault of the society she was born into and her careless mother. Therefore, Mia and her family seemed to be an under class of people, who were also looked down upon. She is assumed to be a ‘chav’ by the way she dresses, her haircut and the language and accent she has. She is rude and defensive, using swear words in everyday conversation, even to her younger sister. The portrayal of the lowest class of British youth is clearly negative, yet is true to real life and the film is meant to be an eye opener into the lives of these girls. This also strongly contradicts the positive and strong-minded middle class Jess, both films being set around the same time and in different parts of London.
Women in Britain are represented in very different ways in the three British films. Made in Dagenham and Bend it like Beckham both show working class and middle class women that are strong minded and have clear views on how women should behave and be treated. In Made in Dagenham, Rita and the machinists are fighting for equal pay to men as they believe that the current pay system was unfair and that they worked just as hard as men. She doesn’t let anyone stop her or get in the way, even her husband who doesn’t understand her campaign. In the time the film was set, women were thought of as second class and had traditional roles of looking after the house and the children, only Rita does all of this as well as working in the sewing factory. She is seen as the hero of the film based on real events and the message of the film is that the British woman could achieve anything if she really tried and bring about a huge change to the world. Similarly in Bend it like Beckham, Jess is the strong women who achieves her dreams against all odds. In both films, the women have people working against them, for example the bosses of Ford and Jess’ mom, who are more traditional in their views and want the heroines to obey by their original cultures and values. In the end, the women in both films succeed in their struggle, portraying British women in a positive light. This view of women in Britain strongly contradicts the portrayal of women in Fish Tank. This lower class of women appear to have little morals and instead of working hard at a job to gain respect, they live on benefits and in a council house, going out in short skirts and crop tops. Mias mother is more interested in her own life and relationships than she is about her own daughters. This shows british women in a negative way and starkly contrasts the respectable women in Made in Dagenham and Bend it like Beckham.
