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  • Essay / Character Analysis of Bombay Beach - 729

    He is an old man from the late 80s, who smokes a lot, is racist, excluded from his family for not supporting their mixed marriages and who has been to 'hospital. He's in the middle of a ruined house with graffiti on the walls, he says his children haven't spoken to him in over a decade because he didn't support them in their marriage to another ethnic group. He didn't seem phased by this at all. I believe that because he is old, has an old mindset and an old school way of thinking, it causes him to not support his children. Because he is racist and does not support his children, he does not deserve to be spoken to. No racist person deserves to reach out, and racism, regardless of age, should not be supported. Given who I am as a person, his flaw is not forgivable. Agarie 3 In conclusion, I don't believe that the faults of Benny's father or the Reds are forgivable, regardless of their situation. One is a racist old man and the other could be considered a bad father. They don't try to rise above or make any real effort. Beny's flaw is completely forgivable because he is a little boy and was put in situations that a young boy should not be in. Bombay Beach is a place filled with many strange people with many different problems and life stories, but due to their circumstances, some of their faults are forgivable and some of them are