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Osama

  • 2003
  • PG-13
  • 1h 23m
ÉVALUATION IMDb
7,3/10
9,8 k
MA NOTE
Osama (2003)
Osama Scene: She Will Be A Boy
Lireclip0 min 57 s
Regarder Osama Scene: She Will Be A Boy
3 vidéos
31 photos
Drama

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueAfter the rise of the Taliban in Afghanistan and the restriction of women in public life, a pre-teen girl is forced to masquerade as a boy in order to find work to support her mother and gra... Tout lireAfter the rise of the Taliban in Afghanistan and the restriction of women in public life, a pre-teen girl is forced to masquerade as a boy in order to find work to support her mother and grandmother.After the rise of the Taliban in Afghanistan and the restriction of women in public life, a pre-teen girl is forced to masquerade as a boy in order to find work to support her mother and grandmother.

  • Director
    • Siddiq Barmak
  • Writer
    • Siddiq Barmak
  • Stars
    • Marina Golbahari
    • Zubaida Sahar
    • Khwaja Nader
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
  • ÉVALUATION IMDb
    7,3/10
    9,8 k
    MA NOTE
    • Director
      • Siddiq Barmak
    • Writer
      • Siddiq Barmak
    • Stars
      • Marina Golbahari
      • Zubaida Sahar
      • Khwaja Nader
    • 80Commentaires d'utilisateurs
    • 105Commentaires de critiques
    • 83Métascore
  • Voir l’information sur la production à IMDbPro
    • Prix
      • 15 victoires et 14 nominations au total

    Vidéos3

    Osama Scene: She Will Be A Boy
    Clip 0:57
    Osama Scene: She Will Be A Boy
    Osama Scene: Nymph
    Clip 0:47
    Osama Scene: Nymph
    Osama Scene: Nymph
    Clip 0:47
    Osama Scene: Nymph
    Osama Scene: You Are A Girl
    Clip 1:04
    Osama Scene: You Are A Girl

    Photos30

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    Rôles principaux20

    Modifier
    Marina Golbahari
    Marina Golbahari
    • Osama
    Zubaida Sahar
    • Mother
    • (as Zubaydah Sahar)
    Khwaja Nader
    • Mullah
    • (as Mohammad Nader Khajeh)
    Mohamad Aaref Haraati
    • Aspnadi
    • (as Mohammad Arif Herati)
    Hamida Refah
    • Grandmother
    Gul Rehman Ghorbandi
    • Mohammad Nabi Nawa
    Mohammad Nabi Nawa
    • Milk man
    Amin Nadem
    • Son of sick old men
    Eli Jaan
    • Sick old men
    Elza Bogova
    • Foreign Female
    Gholaam Sekhi Sedighi
    • Poor Man
    Henry Jordan
    • Male Foreign Reporter
    Najibeh Hamdard
    • Mullah's wife
    Nahid Refaah
    • Mullah's wife
    Bibi Khan Anaa
    • Mullah's wife
    Navaab Khan
    • Judge
    Moalem Khan
    • Spokesperson of the Jugge
    Zin Aldin
    • School teacher of students
    • Director
      • Siddiq Barmak
    • Writer
      • Siddiq Barmak
    • Tous les acteurs et membres de l'équipe
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Commentaires des utilisateurs80

    7,39.7K
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    Avis en vedette

    8simonrosenbaum

    chillingly real

    A powerful and disturbing film of what life was like under the oppressive Taliban rule. Maybe because the cast are not actors and it starts with a boy talking to the camera as if it's a documentary being made it feels like what unfolds is actually happening and this makes it a very real and chilling experience. A film that should be seen.(8/10)
    9Babak

    realistic, deliberate, and on a grave subject (9 out of 10)

    I'm not going to give an account of the plot of the movie, which according to some other reviewers on this forum--and I may add that I agree with them in words--is very simple. The simplicity of the brutality that was brought upon the Afghan people by the Taliban of course does not need many words to convey. Everyone who has heard of the words "oppression," "religious extremism," and "brutality" can give an account of the dreadful reign of the Taliban over Afghanistan. So, I'm totally amazed by the, dare I say, shallow perspective of some reviewers here that take this simplicity as a weakness of the movie. I don't think that the simplicity and/or familiarity of the plot tells *anything* about the strength or the weakness of the movie, nor does it decrease the gravity of the story.

    Another alleged weakness of the movie I wish to dispel is its slow pace. I hardly see why that could be regarded as a weakness when in all its seconds the movie is conveying so much (visual) emotion and from such a close shot. You get to see the real--as far as my experience goes--behaviour of the mullahs, the real mechanisms by which they take hold of the vortex of power in such a war-ridden land.

    On a slightly different note, I was quite surprised to read the feature review on the first page of the movie info, Eyal Philippsborn write "was it the setting or did the Taliban also banned the building of houses with roofs?" well, was it the setting or the catastrophes of about 30 years of civil war and social chaos, Eyal?

    Another expressed criticism I read in the previous reviews was that such deep and engulfing sense of misery cannot possibly be the truth. This is an attempt to reduce the level of the movie to some sort of intellectual propaganda. I have to completely disagree. For two reasons: first of all, in the limited time-span of a movie, one cannot possible hope to see all aspects of life. The director has to choose what s/he wants to show and convey, and quite understandably this movie is about the plagues brought upon an entire nation by the Taliban. And secondly, even though the movie mainly focuses on the miserable life of its characters in such surrealistic-to-the-western-eye settings, it does show tiny glimpses of the beauty of life: the lullaby that the grandma sings to put the little girl to sleep, or the joyful, threatening Espandi (the boy with the smoking bucket of wild rue [Epand in Persian or Dari]) who turns into a supporter of the little girl when she's overwhelmed by the aggressive, intrusive boys in the Taliban's Quranic school.

    I'm not an expert on the more techy parts of the movie-making business, but as an avid movie-goer, I could not pinpoint any particular weakness in terms of camera-work, plot, etc. I tend to think that the complaints the movie receives on these aspects is a more-or-less direct result of a state of being spoiled by the glamorous Hollywood-driven movie industry.

    The only real drawback to the movie was its subtitles. Eyal also noted in the above-mentioned feature review that the opening quote of the movie was obviously--and I think unnecessarily--altered in the caption. The real quote is by Ali Shariati, the celebrated idealogue of the Islamic Revolution in Iran--who died before he could see it happen--which says: "[Oh, God,] Put me among those who give away their worldly desires for their religious one, not those who give away their religious desires for their worldly ones." This is turned into a concise quote by Mandela instead: "I cannot forget, but I can forgive." Not the same thing at all, and I'm not really sure I would say implying the same thing either. The quote by Shariati is in fact very suggestive, and ambiguous in the context of the movie.

    Finally, yes, the movie is grim, and hard to take, but far from dull or artificial. Overall, Osama is a big step into the real examination of the misery of a people who have been deprived even of a glimpse of a normal life by the almost cosmological forces of the international politics.
    8eyal philippsborn

    A wonderful and disturbing film about a regime that scarred an entire nation

    I'll spare you the tedious task of reading this slightly long review and say outright that this film is great but very hard to watch and requires one of those special moods where one wants to see a film and is reluctant to watch some standard multi personality disorder thriller or a romantic comedy that more and more lately, seem mutually exclusive (How to lose a guy in 10 days, Love actually and the list goes on and on).

    Osama, a name that strikes fear in almost every person, is a bogus name of a young girl who lives with her widowed mother and grandmother. The fact that neither women can't go to work under the strict rules of the Taliban, forces the mother to cut her daughter's hair short and send her to work as a boy. Soon enough, the disguised girl is recruited to a religious, Taliban oriented, all male school where she faces the task of fitting in, a task which is partially aided by Esphandi, a beggar teen who knows Osama's secret and goes a great length to hide it, knowing full well that if revealed, both his and her life will be in jeopardy.

    According to the IMDB's Biography of Marina Golbahar (who portrays Osama) the struggle for survival is hardly new to her which is probably why she plays in such a credible and moving manner despite having no acting experience. The acting is the cornerstone of the film and it is the main contributor to the film's impact. Another major factor is the scenery, I will elaborate on that later on.

    Without going into detail as to the plot's progress, I will note that the film doesn't try to embellish the harsh reality of Afghan women and especially their children who, according to the film, are doomed in most cases to be robbed of their childhood.

    I added the "according to the film" reference because this film doesn't try to convey it's hatred to this regime and although I'm hardly a Taliban devotee, I am skeptic enough to know that film can depict anyone they want anyway they choose (just the other day there was a story on 60 minutes that showed how North Korean kids are brainwashed to believe that George W Bush is the 21st century's Hitler ) so one must approach this film under a very critical point of view.

    But even so, there is little dispute that women's rights were trampled during the Taliban reign of oppression and that Afghanistan is a nation in plight in large part due to that regime (was it the setting or did the Taliban also banned the building of houses with roofs?).

    The only reservation I have of the film is the fact that under the loathing of the Talibans, the director, Siddiq bermak, added scenes that weakens the usually high sense of genuineness of the film. For example, in a wedding party the women sing almost throughout the scene about men falling in the war against Russia in the late 80's. Not your regular spice-up-the-party tunes. I assume the director wanted to give us a little background about the characters and forgot that the key to the story's conviction is the appeal of Osama and not the appall of the Taliban (I used that word eight times in this review, I think I overdid it).

    But other than that, the film is very powerful and although the real magnitude if the suffering in Afghanistan will never be known to its full extent, I still managed to feel empathy for the people I used to be completely indifferent to (I admit to my eternal shame).

    8.5 out of 10 on FilmOmeter.

    One more thing I'd like to address to is the quote in the beginning of the film. In the Hebrew subtitled version of the film, the quote was translated as "I may forgive but won't forget" by Nelson Mandela. In the film, however, the quote (in Arabic letters) refers to Doctor Shariati who was the ideologue of the Iranian cue (I didn't get the chance to read the actual quote because my Arabic is a little rusty). I guess there wasn't much point in explaining to a viewer like myself who Shariati was but nevertheless, its an evidence of the tiny alterations film go when they are branded for foreign viewing.
    bankcello

    Some disturbing political thoughts about this fine film.

    There is no need for me to rehash the plot of this film. Many others have done that.

    It is a harrowing experience. However, something occurred to me after seeing it. Given the inhuman treatment of women by the Taliban, why did it take the attacks of September 11 to finally have the US decide to remove the regime. Winston Churchill said that you could always count on the US to do the right thing, after it has done everything else.

    That we (the US) should attack Iraq because our commander in chief didn't like them and they acted poorly towards his father, yet we refrained from doing anything about the Taliban until we were attacked, reflects very poorly upon us.
    Buddy-51

    harrowing view of life under the Taliban

    I saw 'Osama' on the same weekend in which Afghanistan held its first-ever free elections. The contrast between that event and what we see in this film could not be more dramatic and striking.

    This is the first film made in the country since the fall of the Taliban regime. It is a harrowing study of life under that brutal dictatorship as seen through the eyes of a terrified 12-year old girl. The Taliban considered being a woman as almost akin to sinning against God. As a result, women were not allowed to hold jobs, appear in public without male escorts, or show their face or any other part of their body when venturing outdoors. 'Osama' focuses specifically on the plight of war widows who were virtually forced into starvation as a result of these draconian rules. The film tells the tale of a young girl whose mother loses her job at a local hospital. To provide food for the table, the mother and the girl's grandmother devise an extremely dangerous plan to pass the youngster off as a boy, thereby allowing her to work as an assistant to a sympathetic shop owner. Even though the penalty is death if she is caught, the young girl reluctantly accedes to the plot. When she is rounded up with the other local boys to begin a program of religious indoctrination and military training, she must expend a great deal of effort to prevent her ruse from being uncovered.

    'Osama' is a short film, and it doesn't intend to do anything more than offer a very small glimpse into what life was like under this tyrannical regime. In that respect, the film provides an invaluable service to those of us in the West who find it hard to believe that such mind-numbing ignorance and cruelty can still exist in our modern world. We see it, of course, every night on the news, but until an artist can translate it into recognizable human terms, the reality often doesn't hit us in the way that it should. 'Osama' really brings it home to us. Through our experience with these characters, we come to understand how unutterably hopeless and miserable life can be for people trapped in a culture defined by a pre-scientific mindset of irrational bigotry and superstition. The girl, who is dubbed by one of the other characters 'Osama,' is no plucky little heroine who takes on the Bad Guys, indifferent to the dangers she is facing.

    She is a passive victim living a life of paralyzing fear, a perfect symbol for all the other women of her country who were consigned to a similar fate.

    Writer/director Siddiq Barmak has employed non-professional actors to bring the tale to life. All of them do a remarkable job, especially young Marina Golbahari, who captures the wide-eyed terror of her character with vivid exactness. Golbahari becomes such an empathetic figure that her plight is understandable to any person from any culture.

    'Osama' is like one of the early works from the school of post-war Italian neo-realism: small, unadorned and devastating in its simplicity and humanity.

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    Histoire

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    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      This is the first film to be made in Afghanistan since the fall of the Taliban. Previously all filming had been banned.
    • Gaffes
      The first time Osama is encouraged to climb the tree, the amount of light on her face changes between shots. The close shot shows the right side of her face in shadow, while in the long shot from the top of the tree all of her face is in sunlight.
    • Connexions
      Featured in The 61st Annual Golden Globe Awards (2004)

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    FAQ20

    • How long is Osama?Propulsé par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 27 juin 2003 (Afghanistan)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Afghanistan
      • Ireland
      • Japan
      • Netherlands
      • Iran
    • Langues
      • Dari
      • Pashtu
      • English
      • French
      • Arabic
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • 少女奧薩瑪
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Kabul, Afghanistan
    • sociétés de production
      • Barmak Film
      • LeBrocquy Fraser Productions
      • NHK
    • Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 46 000 $ US (estimation)
    • Brut – États-Unis et Canada
      • 1 270 904 $ US
    • Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
      • 51 969 $ US
      • 8 févr. 2004
    • Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
      • 3 910 519 $ US
    Voir les informations détaillées sur le box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 23 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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