Marking has a good eye for capturing the contradictions of Afghanistan.
Afghan Star (2009)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:49
Fresh:49
Rotten:0
Average Rating:7.7/10
Consensus: An enlightening and sobering documentary on Afghanistan’s very own X-Factor.
Theatrical Release:Jun 26, 2009 Limited
Synopsis:
In Afghanistan you risk your life to sing. After 30 years of war and
Taliban rule, pop culture has returned to the country—and since 2005,
millions are tuning in to Tolo TV’s wildly popular...
In Afghanistan you risk your life to sing. After 30 years of war and
Taliban rule, pop culture has returned to the country—and since 2005,
millions are tuning in to Tolo TV’s wildly popular American Idol-style
series Afghan Star. Like its Western predecessors, people compete for a
cash prize and record deal. More surprisingly, the contest is open to
everyone across the country despite gender, ethnicity or age. Two thousand
people audition, including three extremely brave women. And
when viewers vote for their favorites via cell phone, it is, for many, their
first encounter with the democratic process.
Winner of the Directing and Audience Awards in Sundance’s 2009 World
Documentary competition, Havana Marking’s timely and moving film follows
the dramatic stories of four young finalists—two men and two
women—as they hazard everything to become the nation’s favorite performer.
By observing the Afghani people's relationship to its pop culture,
Afghan Star is the perfect window into a country’s tenuous, ongoing
struggle for modernity. What Americans consider frivolous entertainment
is downright revolutionary—and more human—in this troubled
part of the world. --© Zeitgeist Films
Director: Havana Marking
Director: Havana Marking
Composer: Simon Russell
Studio: Zeitgeist Films
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Reviews for Afghan Star
Havana Marking’s uproarious, awareness-raising documentary tells us more about the title country than a month of newscasts.
Although sadly rife with gut-clenching moments as those, Afghan Star is most thrilling when depicting the show's delicately balanced effort to bring Afghans together despite their fractious ethnic and clan boundaries.
In the end, who wins and loses the competition is incidental. The power of Marking's film comes from the fact the competition exists at all.
Using popular culture as a window onto the hopes and fears of contemporary Afghanistan, Havana Marking's winning documentary is worth making a song and dance about.
...by the end of the 88 minute journey you'll learn more about contemporary Afghanistan than you will from a month of watching television news in the United States.
It's a shrewd and entertaining guide to this popular phenomenon, which even the Taliban cannot quite suppress, though nothing in the film quite matches the poignancy and power of its opening minute, showing a blind child singing about the power of love.
An extraordinary documentary about an American Idol-like TV show that manages to capture the volatile mix of history, religion, and pop culture in contemporary war-torn Afghanistan.
One of the most hopeful and heart-rending movies I’ve seen this year.
...insightful document that gives you so much more than the well-done look at a reality show.
Marking follows four contestants for the three months leading up to "Afghan Star's" finale and, while there are some amusing parallels to "American Idol," it is also clear Glambert would risk stoning had he been performing in Afghanistan.
And while its style and structure conform to the well-worn template established by docs like ‘Spellbound’, its success lies in creating an accessible, fun way into serious issues.
Like The Kite Runner novel and movie, the documentary Afghan Star succeeds at dramatizing the lives of Afghans, but those we see on screen are real flesh-and-blood characters -- people who let their true feelings emerge.
Sobering and cautiously optimistic, Havana Marking’s documentary is a treat.
Though the who-will-win? structure both allows a too-brief peek into the quartet’s backgrounds and generates tension, the answer almost seems superfluous. The phenomenon itself is the real star.
Tracking the rebuilding of this decimated, divided country through the prism of trash TV might seem trite, but Havana Marking’s ambitious if overstretched documentary is sobering stuff.
Director Havana Marking's work is quite moving, particularly when it follows two of the three women who compete with nearly 2000 male applicants for the title.
This documentary about the Afghani version of American Idol is good and worth a look, but I was never swept up by it emotionally.
The movie uses the talent show Afghan Star as a prism through which to examine the fragmented tribal culture of Afghanistan as reflected in the backgrounds of four finalists (two of them women) and the public responses to their performances.
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