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Ezra (2007)
Director: Newton I. Aduaka
Movie review
From Time Out London
Aduaka's second film after the London-set 'Rage' tells of the experience of a child soldier (Kamara) who fights in a war in an unnamed African state, although the timing and setting recall the civil war in Sierra Leone in the 1990s. The film jumps back and forth from the bloody stage of this battle to a later truth and reconciliation hearing, during which Ezra stands against his relatives in the search for truth. It's an intelligent, cleverly measured film, but what's particularly interesting is how it treads a similar path as the recent 'Blood Diamond' yet steers clear of that film's failings. In 'Ezra', there's no Leonardo DiCaprio to lead us by the hand through both an exotic foreign landscape and a host of genre conventions. Instead, the film is raw and truthful. When an exploitative white character does appear in 'Ezra' he stays for a few minutes and is less poster-boy than grey, ugly and corrupt.Author: Dave Calhoun
Time Out London
User reviews of this film
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- A said...
- Posted on Feb 14 2008 21:47 The movie serves as an excellent expose on the horrors that unfolded in the jungles of West Africa, safely hidden away from the world's eyes. What is lacking in cinematic finesse is compensated by the attempt to bring immediacy to the crimes suffered by hundreds of W. Africans.
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Cast & crew
Director: Newton I. Aduaka
Cast: Mamoudou Turay Kamara, Mariame N'Diaye, Mamusu Kallon
Duration: 110 mins
US Release: Feb 13 2008
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