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He Named Me Malala

He Named Me Malala (2015)

October. 02,2015
|
7
| Documentary

A look at the events leading up to the Taliban's attack on the young Pakistani school girl, Malala Yousafzai, for speaking out on girls' education and the aftermath, including her speech to the United Nations.

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Reviews

BoardChiri
2015/10/02

Bad Acting and worse Bad Screenplay

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Chirphymium
2015/10/03

It's entirely possible that sending the audience out feeling lousy was intentional

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Invaderbank
2015/10/04

The film creates a perfect balance between action and depth of basic needs, in the midst of an infertile atmosphere.

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Kaelan Mccaffrey
2015/10/05

Like the great film, it's made with a great deal of visible affection both in front of and behind the camera.

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kosmasp
2015/10/06

While a documentary can have the distance approach, it would have been difficult to sell this one. This is all about feeling, all about emotion and all about emancipation. It is also about freedom and unity. About misunderstandings and clarifications. There is so much going on, that it's amazing it's not a longer movie/running time.It works on almost all these levels, people are familiar with the person (be it because of her TV appearances or her nominations). But it's still something different to see her personally or learn about her family and her father. You have to be a strong person to survive the things she has to face, but she still remains "human" (if that is a thing to say). A strong message is delivered and a powerful movie made ...

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joe-debono
2015/10/07

I simply don't understand it. She was shot in the head for speaking out against the cruel, primitive, repressive, religious laws of the Taliban. She recovered and spoke against the evil.She won the Nobel Peace Prize, then went straight back to the evil religion that caused her all the pain and grief.She says: There is a moment when you have to choose whether to be silent or to stand up.She surely is brave but there's another part to that realisation... she needs to set the example, walk away from that primitive world view, walk away and leave that bronze age nonsense behind and live bravely in the real world.That would top this story off nicely.

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eleventh-warrior
2015/10/08

I think Davis Guggenheim has no work now a days...how much money did he get for making this documentary totally on false information....In swat where malala used to live,there is no ban on girls to get educated Before malala and after malala SURPRISINGLY not a single incident of Taliban shooting girls ever taken place....i don't know why malala was attacked ...she is another ordinary girl just like all other girls and we didn't hear malala's name before...his father Ziauddin Yousafzai speaks now on TV as philosopher but as we take a look on his past ....he is not well educated or illiterate person .malala was shot on the head and here wounds often changes from time to time from left to right and right to left...she survived and along with malala there was another girl ..i cant remember her name now.. she died on the spot but BBC and CNN didn't bother to repeat her name...i think if malala is a hero then the girl who died with her her is a super hero ...we should remember her more than malala...i don't know who want to prove that the malala is warrior...and what is the benefit behind this...who is behind the malala....what they want from malala....and the people are so sentimental ...people are just like little children they absorb it as shown on media...but reality is totally different....

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Lloyd Bayer
2015/10/09

Having saved the world so many times, how many superheroes have you seen on the cover of Time magazine? That's right, they don't exist. But real heroes do and they don't need superpowers or a fancy costume to stand in the face of injustice. As a defender of truth and equality in the times we live in, this is the incredible true story of Malala Yousafzai, a real hero whose only weapon is indelible courage. From Academy Award winning director Davis Guggenheim and produced by Imagenation Abu Dhabi, He Named Me Malala is part documentary, part animation, and part live action, but wholly narrated by Malala and her father Ziauddin Yousafzai. Although the use of animation is questionable, these segments are used as plot points leading up to the day when Malala was shot in the head by the Taliban. If not, Guggenheim would have had to reenact those moments using real actors but at the risk of discounting the authenticity of this documentary. Along with actual news footage and still images, much of the story is a reiteration of her courage, her ordeal, her survival, and her dedication as a right-to-education activist. While this might seem all too familiar to anyone following the news, the documentary doesn't feel scripted or even overladen with praise. And why shouldn't it be? This is about the assassination attempt on a 15-year-old girl whose only crime was speaking out on her basic right to an education.Inspired by her memoir I Am Malala, the film begins in Birmingham, United Kingdom, in 2013, where the Yousafzai family is based post recovery period. Although you don't see a scar, Malala bears a lopsided smile whenever she is asked a question. There is sadness in her eyes along with bashful insecurity but also wisdom and an inner strength much beyond her age. "Three years have passed", she recalls, not of the attempt on her life, but having left her beautiful home in the Swat Valley province of Pakistan. Surrounded by Afghani Mountains, we are shown images of this scenic region (which is always presented as a place of bloodshed and massacre by the media) before Malala begins her story. This is also where the narrative shifts from Malala to her father, beginning with his version of a 'love marriage' to Malala's mother. As a self-taught public speaker, Ziauddin's story is as incredible as his daughter Malala's. While it's clear where the latter gets her courage and insight from, it's the development of a symbiotic father-daughter relationship that makes this a documentary that must be seen.Riveting, and at times overwhelming, He Named Me Malala is a delight to watch, and so is Malala Yousafzai. Guggenheim could have stuffed this film with geopolitical propaganda and ended it with a bleeding cry for justice. When asked if they caught the person who shot his daughter, Ziauddin replies "Not a person, but an ideology". Likewise, Malala has her own quips, and along with her brothers and her father add refreshingly funny moments given the subject matter. At the same time and given her status as a public figure, at no point does Malala seem like a celebrity, nor does she see herself that way. What you do see is a shy teenager but one that is utterly brave and honest with the kind of raw dedication that outflanks millions, possibly billions, of people her age. The fact that Malala was featured on Time magazine twice, followed by her becoming the youngest ever recipient of a Nobel Peace Prize in 2014 proves my last statement. He Named Me Malala is highly inspirational and the type of film where you clap in the end, only to realize that you've clapped too early. Malala is only 18 now, but she has achieved far more than any of us ever will. That itself is worth a standing ovation and I wish her a long life of success in her fight for equality and education with many more accolades to come.

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