User:Ralkhayat/sandbox

About Clara Bow
Call Her Savage, enabled Clara Bow to return to the screen and offered the audience a more balanced women that resembles nothing of her reckless youth years.

Fox included a clause in Clara's contract about her maintaining a certain weight. Clara's weight struggle become publicized in magazines.

The films Clara Bow would work on would attract the viewership of all genders, with film titles like the "Adventurous Sex, My Lady's Lips, Kiss Me Again, No Limit, Call Her Savage" which were not as sexually charged films as the titles would suggest.

Clara bow was critiqued by Gilbert Roland for falling to make the same success in talking films as she did in the silent films.

About LGBTQ depictions
Call Her Savage was one of the early films to showcase scenes that included people from the LGBTQ community, and this is seen in the gay bar scene.

Female depicitons
The film's powerful female roles that allowed women to have a sense of agency and sensuality, is also depicting the women's power to be aggressive.

American Indians Depections
Gilbert Roland is a Mexican actor who played the role of the Indian Clara's charter falls in love with, it is important to note that he was one of the actors who were not Eastern European and hired to perform an American Native Indian role on film at that time.

The film Call Her Savage constantly uses the racist term of "half-breed", all throughout the film to refer to people who are of mixed races.

Clara's character inability to become a well-behaved and well-mannered individual by society's standards was blamed on the brief love affair Clara's mother had with an American Indian man whom is her biological father. As a result of that affair, Clara's savage ways on screen is linked to be a direct result of her being a "half-breed". When Clara's character finally settles down and she gets to marry Moonglow who is also a half-breed, and is able to tend to her well.

Pre-Code film
The film Call Her Savage is an a time capsule to attest to how pre-code days allowed filmmakers to discuss various topics without any consequences or regulations. The set of codes the film breaks include allowing the death of a baby, the use of drugs, violence, murder and sex. In addition, the film also showcased an attempt at rape, homosexuality and prostitution which do not comply with the code era.

The Film Daily
Highlighted how Clara is going to perform at a higher emotional level that has not been seen on screen before. In addition, the magazine revealed the Clara will be hosting two performances at The Roxy theatre after her 10-day vacation. The Magazine also discussed the content of the film, describing Clara's character to be an untamed spirit and her savageness to be the product of her mother's love encounter with the son of an indian chief. In the summary, the magazine also pointed out that when Clara finally settled down it was with a "half-breed" man, following in the footsteps of her mother. The use of the word "half-breed" is troubling in its nature, and showcases the little acceptance that existed at the time for the mixing of races.

The film also attracted 900,000 audience members when it was first showcased in the main 42 cities that played the film.

Variety
According to the article written by Variety, Clara Bow and her husband felt that the director pushed her beyond her comfort zone of modesty outfits when it came to the attack scene in Call Her Savage, when he asked her to show more of her skin on screen. The Academy dismissed the case, on the grounds that both Clara and her husband did not meant to seek publicity from their protest.

Useful sources

 * 1) Clara bow returns to screen after two years
 * 2) Screened Out
 * 3) Capitalizing their charms: cinema stars and physical culture in the 1920s.
 * 4) The elusive/ubiquitous representation of rape: a historical survey of rape in U.S. film, 1903-1972
 * 5) The It Girl
 * 6) Gilbert Roland; Obituary
 * 7) The week
 * 8) Clara Bow as a Termagant in a Film of a Novel by Tiffany Thayer -- The Night Mayor
 * 9) Turner Classic Movies on Call Her Savage
 * 10) Otherness and the Media : The Ethnography of the Imagined and the Imaged
 * 11) Clara Bow Is Pure Dynamite in 'Call Her Savage'
 * 12) Stars Clara Bow as Pre-Code Dynamite

Article Evaluation
I am evaluating (Modern Family) television show article content, tone, and sourcing.

Evaluating content
Everything in the article is relevant to the topic of the article, and nothing was distracting. The article is missing the reception of season 8 entirely, as for seasons 9 and 10 there was one paragraph to describe the both of them, which did not follow the format for the other seasons in terms of length.

Evaluating tone
The tone of the article is neutral, and not a single position is made more of preference. There are not any viewpoints that are either overrepresented, or underrepresented. The article has a neutral tone.

Evaluating sources
The links for the citations do work, and the source does support the claims in the article. The facts have reliable sources more often than not. For example sources like the New York Times in referenced, other sources that can be deemed as less neutral is the Telegraph.

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Adding a Citation
added reference to the Film Censorship article

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