The film is awash with good intentions, and the actual atrocities are vividly depicted and chilling... but the film loses its momentum when it attempts to analyze the evils of poverty, anarchy and violence.
Ezra (2008)
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Reviews Counted:17
Fresh:11
Rotten:6
Average Rating:6.2/10
Theatrical Release:Feb 15, 2008 Limited
Synopsis: The journey to understanding the truth during wartime often involves an intense passage through a stinging psychic landscape of secrets, lies, greed, and manipulation. Newton Aduaka's emotionally... The journey to understanding the truth during wartime often involves an intense passage through a stinging psychic landscape of secrets, lies, greed, and manipulation. Newton Aduaka's emotionally powerful feature Ezra is a well-crafted tale about a Sierra Leonean boy and his community as they attempt to heal themselves through exposing and embracing the truth. One fateful morning, seven-year-old Ezra skips his way to school and is kidnapped by rebels. They take him into the jungle and train him to be a soldier. Seven years later, Ezra sits in front of a Truth and Reconciliation Commission, where he is asked to piece together a jigsaw puzzle of facts from the night of a devastating attack on a village. What is supposed to be a confession soon becomes a trial as his mute sister, Onitcha, chooses to reveal a secret she has kept from her brother. Aduaka creates a deftly observed world and draws impressive performances from his young cast to bring audiences into close contact with the life and mindset of a child combatant. With an estimated 300,000 child soldiers worldwide serving in armed conflict today, Ezra is an important and timely story that rarely gets depicted on the screen. -- Sundance Film Festival [More]
Director: Newton Aduaka
Director: Newton Aduaka
Reviews for Ezra
Lacking in subtlety and heavy on moral outrage, Ezra improves as it unfolds.
borders on being something immensely powerful, and then, as if shy or ashamed of its promise, flips its wig and falls back on convention.
The script's flip-flopping between the past and present is so clunky and unfocused that confusion often reigns, thus undermining any clear portrait of its subject.
Rarely has the gulf between relevance of subject matter and ineptitude of execution been greater than it is in Ezra.
A taut film detailing the psychological warfare used to control child soldiers who fill the ranks of rebel armies in Africa.
The tatty budget shows. But there are extraordinary moments in the rebel camp, in which the filmmaking becomes simpler as the psychology grows more complicated, as the boys (and girls) lean on one another and grope their way toward a kind of normalcy.
'Ezra' moves, and is smart enough not to endorse empty enthusiasms or slogans.
Despite some strategic errors, director Newton I. Aduaka uses documentary techniques to inform a challenging and disturbing subject.
Since the movie, however infuriating, is a plea for mercy, the audience is compelled to forgive Ezra its often jittery and confusing overlaps.
A passionate, harrowing drama about rebellion, atrocity and child soldiering in Africa, Ezra is raw and violent.
Clear-eyed and without aiming for the emotional jugular, Ezra goes well beyond geography, politics and ethnicity... to explore the psychological toll on young people caught in violent situations not of their making and beyond their understanding.
Newton I. Aduaka's comprehensive account of an African nightmare covers a lot of important ground, making this flawed film worth seeing.
Less a catalog of horrors than how a child soldier and his community can pick up the pieces after war, with fictionalized sentimentality, but powerful and passionate
Ezra is a scorching portrait of an African child who is kidnapped and turned into a soldier for a rebel militia.
Latest News for Ezra
February 13, 2008:
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