Briski targets an audience difficult to get interested in these type of problems such as prostitution or drug addiction. The high upper medium class, or even the middle class are the ones that can help and make a difference in helping these children or families trying to get out of the brothels. They are the ones that can really make a difference in the red light district because they have connections, money, and better surroundings. The high upper class and the medium class are people that do not care or ignore these problems since they do not have anything to do with them or their families. The message of these children asking for help can be seen all throughout the documentary. It is very emotional and heartbreaking to see these children that want to prosper by themselves, with no help from their families. Briski tried to help them but there is not much she can do either. She can at least show us the story of their lives and hope that someone would help them. These children need serious help to get out of the brothels and become someone better for their future. As soon as Briski entered the brothels she met the children. Brothels filled with children, they were everywhere. They were curious and did not understand what she was doing there, she was there to help them succeed and hopefully abandon the brothels. She …show more content…
She is little and cute. She is in the photography class; she is very quiet and shy with the camera. Kochi does the dishes, brings tea, and does errands for her upstairs neighbor (Briski 7:39). Her story is heartbreaking because no child should be doing this type of work, she should be playing with friends and having fun every day. She mops twice a day and she gets paid for doing this. In the evenings if her neighbor wants she does shopping and works until eleven at night. Kochi keeps thinking what she could become is she gets an education and leaves the brothels. She likes the photography class and taking pictures, but she does not like editing them. She feels shy taking pictures in public because people tease her and say mean things. She lives with her grandmother because her mother cannot take care of her. Kochi tells us that her father tried to sell her, and if her sister did not come to get her, she would have been sold. Who knows, if she would have been sold maybe she would have never seen her family ever again. Kochi is worried that she would probably become a prostitute and does not want to. Briski thinks that she is going to be forced into prostitution because she is very shy and never says no. At 4 in the morning Kochi starts cleaning houses with her grandmother, but Kochi works so hard that she has no time to rest or play with her friends. Her mother lost six sons and her husband died too. Kochi is almost by herself since no