ABC Africa




I was doing a bit of rustle-the-trees advocacy work with the One Campaign recently, and it reminded me of Abbas Kiarostami's ABC Africa. A documentary examination of the ravages of war, poverty and AIDS in Uganda, ABC Africa is a film that malingers and dawdles quite a good bit as it creates loose yet moving impressions rather than a concrete arc. Yet it also reminds us that feeling is indeed much stronger than thought; the at-odds sensations of joyfulness and despair that it produces serve as a powerful exemplar that aid is not about some vague financial hand-out, but a hand up for a people whom opportunity and modernity has largely forgotten.

Over the course of a 10-day visit to the country (his first), Iranian director Kiarostami captures the faces of several hundred of Uganda’s estimated 1.6 million orphans, the number a result of a mid-1980s civil war and crippling battle with AIDS and malaria. He spends some time delving into an International Fund for Agricultural Development program that allows/mandates villagers to buy into a collective agenda that protects them, not unlike insurance, against life’s valleys.

Mostly, though, Kiarostami (Taste of Cherry, The Wind Will Carry Us) uses a very nonjudgmental lens, gently elucidating greater meaning through context and only occasionally prodding his subjects. The film’s form is really quite loose — sometimes too much so, honestly. A lot of the movie’s 84-minute running time is comprised of the simple, impressionistic, non-narrated recording of everyday life — the wonderment with which kids behold a camera, running after him like American suburbanites chasing an ice cream truck — and a little of this goes a long way. When Kiarostami lingers at a prophylactic billboard blacked out, presumably by staunchly Catholic proponents of abstinence-only sex education, or, later in the movie, comes across an Austrian couple adopting a little African girl, you wish the film pursued these story strands with a little more dynamism.

In the end, ABC Africa is shattering in its own glancing way, but not necessarily philosophically profound. There’s no consensus or even, really, a finely honed inquisitiveness. Kiarostami documents wholeheartedly, but without any sort of accompanying filter or prism; this creates a deeply felt movie — and one still overall very worthwhile — but also one that also doesn’t completely live up to your fullest expectations of what it could be.

DVD bonus features include a theatrical trailer for the film and a 55-minute mini-documentary from Pat Collins and Fergus Daly, entitled Abbas Kiarostami: The Art of Living, which delves further into the director’s diverse interests (including poetry and photography) as well as his filmography. A tri-fold booklet also excerpts an interview between Scott Foundas and Kiarostami, the rest of which is available via an included Web link. To purchase the film via Amazon, click here. B (Movie) B- (Disc)

 

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  • 8/9/2007 6:02 PM Edward wrote:
    Ahh, this movie killed me -- I found it very profound, actually. Just in a reserved, very different sort of way.
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