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March 2015, Week 1

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Sun, 1 Mar 2015 13:52:50 -0500
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POLITICAL FILM REVIEW
NEWSLETTER #472 OF THE POLITICAL FILM SOCIETY
P.O. Box 461267 Hollywood, CA 90046
_www.polfilms.com_ (http://www.polfilms.com/)
March 1, 2015




POLITICAL FILM SOCIETY AWARDS ANNOUNCED
Members of the Political Film Society chose the following films as the
best in each of four categories:
DEMOCRACY Kill the Messenger (directed by Michael Cuesta)
EXPOSÉ Difret (directed by Zeresenay Mehari)
HUMAN RIGHTS César Chavez (directed by Diego Luna)
PEACE Diplomacy (directed by Volker Schlöndorff)
TIMBUKTU DEMONSTRATES WHY JIHAD MASKS FOR COLONIZATION
Directed by Abderrahmane Sissako, but filmed in nearby Oualata, also
dating back to the 12th century, Timbuktu begins by showing the peaceful lives
of citizens of rural Mali—cattle farming, fishing, and an open market amid
sand dunes and ruins of ancient structures. Arabic-speakers with weapons
have arrived in the area. Their megaphones declare new rules based on sharia
law: No music, no smoking, no soccer, women must wear gloves while selling
food, veils to cover their heads, women and men must sleep apart, brides can
be forcibly removed from their families, as portrayed in the film Difret.
After a courtlike proceeding, the penalty is 40 lashes for minor crimes,
death for serious crimes inflicted by gunshot or stoning, and material
compensation for a family that suffers a human loss. Accidental death is not an
acceptable defense for murder. The reaction of the Muslim leader of the local
temple is to argue that such practices are contrary to the peaceful
Islamic faith. Thus, rather than bringing order to the peaceful citizens, the
outsiders (including the leader who smokes, violating his own edict) act as a
colonial power, seizing territory and making citizens into subjects without
rights. Citizens who do not flee choose defiance but suffer martyrdom.
Based on an actual event, the film is perhaps the most eloquent critique of
the hypocrisy of contemporary jihadism. Yet the film presents the paradigm of
colonization—occupying and seizing power over new territory on a
self-righteous pretext. Similar developments occurred when America’s native
populations were subject to new rules backed by firearms, and they continue in
other guises whenever those in authority abuse their power. The Political Film
Society has nominated Timbuktu as best film of 2015 on the need to
safeguard democracy, human rights, and a peaceful world. MH
OUTCAST HAS BEEN CAST OUT BY THE CHINESE GOVERNMENT
Directed by Nick Powell, the film Outcast has a lot of combat, beginning
with the Crusades, when Gallain (played by Nicholas Cage) is disappointed
that his military student Jacob (Hayden Christiansen) has apparently killed
women and children (though Jacob did not do so). Both leave separately,
headed on different paths for China, where Shing (Andy On) has just led a
victorious army and returns to claim the throne from his ailing father (Shi
Liang). But the king has designated Shing’s younger brother Zhao (Bill Su
Jiahang) as the heir to the throne and has assigned his sister Lian (Crystal Liu
Yifei) to make sure that the future king’s life will be safe as they flee
for their lives. Jacob, whose path crosses the prince and the princess,
then protects them until they reach a mountain top fortress, where Gallain and
his Chinese bride are holding out with family defenders. The king is
assassinated by Shing, claims that Zhao has done so, and demands that the army
bring Zhao to justice, which of course means another battle is inevitable.
Although the film was partly financed by a Chinese company with government
approval, the film was not allowed to be exhibited on what was to be the
opening day last September. The reason is unclear but underscores the
difficulty of working with the government to cash in on such a large film market.
Among possible explanations are that there is a quota of foreign films
allowed in the country at any one time; there might be scenes that need to be
removed; or that the story involves Caucasians fighting better than Chinese
at kung fu in the twelfth century, not an acceptable plot just before the
national holiday during the first ten days of October. MH

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