This kind of film can only ha ha ha

Lola 2022-01-21 08:02:07

This year, Oscar refreshed the bottom line again.

Hamza Al-Kateab is nominated for the Oscar for Best Documentary Feature Film.

Picture two and picture three: The photo with Hamza Al-Kateab is the protagonist of his "documentary" "For Sama" about the Syrian war, Maayouf Abu Bahr, a member of the "Nurdin Zanji" movement of Saint Z organization.

Photo 4: Maayouf Abu Bahr participated in the "beheading" of a 12-year-old Palestinian teenager, Abudallah Issa, in the summer of 2016.

This kind of merchandise can legally step onto the Oscar stage, which in itself is the sadness and shame of this century.

View more about For Sama reviews

Extended Reading
  • Toby 2022-03-15 09:01:09

    I can’t wait to look for it when I see the trailer. After reading it, combined with the recent so-called revolution launched by Hong Kong thugs, I have some new ideas about politics and war. The initial protests and slogans used by the Syrian opposition in the film are familiar. They lamented that the original campaigns were launched by students, jc suppressed, and then jc was scolded for betraying the people, and the routines that led to national chaos step by step are universal in the world. This film records people from the perspective of the opposition, and records the experience of the "relentless, rashly life" Russian army besieging civilians in Syria. It is definitely not to deny the authenticity of the film or the hardships of the people in the war, but from the political background of the film to realize that there are a thousand Hamlets in the eyes of a thousand people, and people only want to see what they want to see. There is no such thing as a philosophical standpoint in politics.

  • Enos 2022-03-16 09:01:07

    #curzon, to be honest, I can’t understand why I want a child, why don’t I want to provide relative safety, but hold the child to death. I don’t know what it says in the film, and I regret it? Or does it (perhaps subconsciously) feel that children are a factor that adds drama to the documentary? That said, I look gloomy, but the similar theme of "How Home is Home" touches me badly. The drama sells miserably. It depends on whether you can pay for it, but the documentary sells miserably. If the recorder participates, it will make me feel bad. Resisting does not mean that one cannot participate, but one should not risk the life of an indecisive other, that is, emma. It may also be that the idea was simpler when recording, but the editing process was to disrupt the timeline and add the author’s first-person explanation to achieve a turning point and sensation for the purpose of winning prizes and more audiences. These really made the audience in the theater take a breath. Or lament, or weep from time to time, and won the best documentary in Cannes a few months ago. Five stars were given to the scene of the war in Syria that he had never seen before, and one star was reduced when he took the emma back to the hospital, and regardless of the woman's cry of objection, another star was reduced when he took a close-up shot of the corpse.

For Sama quotes

  • Waad Al-Khateab: Sama. You're the most beautiful thing in our life. But what a life I've brought you into. You didn't choose this. Will you ever forgive me?

  • Waad Al-Khateab: The sound of our songs was louder than the bombs falling outside