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The Kite Runner (2007)

Director: Marc Forster

Critics' rating

Average user rating
3 reviews

Synopsis

‘The Kite Runner’ is the film of the international bestselling book which tells the story of Amir, a well-to-do boy from the Wazir Akbar Khan district of Kabul, who is haunted by the guilt of betraying his childhood friend Hassan, the son of his father's Hazara servant. It is set against a backdrop of tumultuous events, from the fall of the monarchy in Afghanistan through the Soviet invasion, the mass exodus of refugees to Pakistan and the United States, and the Taliban regime.

Movie review

From Time Out New York

Khaled Hosseini’s engaging best-seller cries out for a film treatment on an epic scale. But with his uneven, awards-baiting adaptation, Marc Forster seems a tourist both culturally and dramatically. The sledgehammer sentimentality of his Monster’s Ball and Finding Neverland is very much in evidence—and Hosseini’s story, which relies on at least one fatuous contrivance, caters to some of the director’s worst instincts.

In any case, the corrosive guilt that stems from an early episode in the novel has been muted. Beginning in ’70s Afghanistan, the film follows Amir (Ebrahimi, and later a tentative Abdalla) and his servant’s son Hassan (Mahmidzada), whose friendship is poisoned by an incident that, while carefully presented, may have risked endangering the young actors in their native Afghanistan. Despite the controversy, the film itself seems unlikely to get many viewers’ blood boiling, failing to establish the right pace for a narrative that spans decades. (The respectful screenplay is by 25th Hour’s David Benioff.) The most refreshing thing about The Kite Runner may be the decision to film it with a mostly unknown, multilingual cast; it’s good to see Homayoun Ershadi again after his role in Abbas Kiarostami’s Taste of Cherry—even if there was more tension in that film, in which he rarely left his Land Rover.

Author: Ben Kenigsberg

Time Out New York Issue 637.638: December 13–26, 2007


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User reviews of this film

  • sheila said...
    Posted on Feb 25 2008 04:08 fairystory or documentary? No continuity. Photography great.
    Report as inappropriate
  • logo said...
    Posted on Jan 14 2008 12:51 bad film, made from CIA
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  • Carol S said...
    Posted on Jan 07 2008 21:00 A most poignant look at how power and war impact a family. Afghanistan has been given a face.
    Report as inappropriate

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