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War Witch

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War Witch (2013)

March. 01,2013
|
7
|
NR
| Drama War
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Somewhere in Sub-Saharan Africa, Komona a 14-year-old girl tells her unborn child growing inside her the story of her life since she has been at war. Everything started when she was abducted by the rebel army at the age of 12.

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GetPapa
2013/03/01

Far from Perfect, Far from Terrible

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Sabah Hensley
2013/03/02

This is a dark and sometimes deeply uncomfortable drama

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Guillelmina
2013/03/03

The film's masterful storytelling did its job. The message was clear. No need to overdo.

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Celia
2013/03/04

A great movie, one of the best of this year. There was a bit of confusion at one point in the plot, but nothing serious.

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Elinor
2013/03/05

This was a very interesting movie, and probably the best filmed African movie that I have seen. This movie is about a young girl named Komona who describes her life and her situation that she is in. In this movie, the rebel army takes her in, and brainwashes her to kill her own parents, this eventually affects her throughout the film. Komona was seen as a girl with "special powers", and was seen as a "Witch" to the rebel force. My favorite character in the film was Komona, because despite the fact that she had to murder people, one of them being her parents, she was still brave throughout the movie, and managed to survive on her own towards the end of the film, after the Magician perished. Overall I thought that this movie was great, and would not have changed anything. I would give this film a 4/5 stars.

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MartinHafer
2013/03/06

I expected much more from "War Witch". After all, it was nominated for the Best Foreign Language Oscar and is about a very important topic, children who are kidnapped and forced to serve in evil rebel forces in Africa. I've seen several documentaries about this (especially in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Uganda) and the films have been absolutely heartbreaking to watch due to the evil being perpetrated by these groups (such as the Lord's Army). Yet, inexplicably, "War Witch" seemed far less hard-hitting and interesting.When the film begins, the main character (later dubbed the 'War Witch') is narrating about her life two years earlier. An unnamed rebel group in an unnamed African nation comes on a small village and they kidnap the children (who looked about ages 10-14) and they forced these victims to murder their own parents! Then, they are taken to a rag- tag rebel camp and indoctrinated. The rest of the film follows this girl's adventures--such as her strange ability to see dead people as well as her ill-fated marriage.Considering how tough the film began, I was really surprised that over time the film just seemed to fizzle and seemed to lack direction. The film SHOULD have been a strong indictment of the evil forces on the continent that rob children of their childhoods but it got lost, a bit, with the ghosts, white chicken, marriage and other distractions. My advice--see one of the documentaries instead, such as "Sewing Hope".

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Roland E. Zwick
2013/03/07

In the harrowing, Oscar-nominated Canadian drama "War Witch," a young African girl is conscripted into a band of armed rebels, ordered by them to kill her own parents, then forced, along with the other children in her village, to fight against the government forces they're opposing. Because she seemingly has some sort of psychic visions of where the enemy is hiding in the woods (it's actually hallucinations brought on by a psychotropic liquid she imbibes from some local plants), she earns the position of personal "witch" to the chief rebel himself - a position that brings with it special protection as well (at least up to a point). But that's only the beginning of Komona's ordeal as she hooks up with an albino "magician" (the excellent Serge Kanyinda) with whom she tries to flee the horrors of the world around them.And it is those very horrors - the nonstop terror and violence, and the ever present prospect of sudden death - that writer/director Kim Nguyen captures to such powerful effect in this film. Despite its occasional forays into the surreal, what one takes away most from "War Witch" is its unflinching willingness to confront the brutal realities of life for Komona and the countless others who share her predicament. Then there are the occasional acts of random kindness that allow hope to flourish even in the most horrible of circumstances.And all throughout her ordeal, Komona must find a way to bury, both literally and figuratively, the ghosts of the parents she killed.Rachel Mwanza is utterly amazing as Komona, and she richly deserved all the praise and awards heaped on her for her performance. Whether it's her heartbreaking narration to her unborn child or the understated way in which she reacts to and internally processes the unspeakable atrocities she both witnesses and is forced to commit, Mwanza embodies a much larger tragedy within the narrower confines of a single character.It may be hard to watch at times, but "War Witch" provides an invaluable reminder of what happens when we send our children off to war.

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Nafis Shahriyar
2013/03/08

During African civil war, Komona, a 14-year old African rural girl, gets abducted by some brutal rebellious chaps and bears unbearable woes, along with an unborn war child in her miserable fate. Kim Nguyen, in his path of direction, seems brilliant with the treatment of children psychology in that inhuman environment. He beautifully represents the war-witch, Komona's romance with the Magician who was also believed to have some spiritual ability just like her. The way how Komona is forced to be mature in the cruel world at her early days and her mental conflicts during her pregnancy would play with our sentiments and emotions a lot. A deep melancholy tone flows throughout the film with narratives. Definitely an applauding pick of Oscar board (Y)___

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