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The Village Next to Paradise Review

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The Village Next to Paradise Review: A Glimpse of Everyday Resilience

Finding Hope in Ordinary Lives

Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi by Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi
12 months ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 6 mins read
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Set along the coast of Somalia, Mo Harawe’s debut feature, The Village Next to Paradise, presents a nuanced view of everyday life for a family facing challenges with perseverance. We meet Marmagade, a gravedigger and father raising his son Cigaal alone in their rural village. Joining them is Marmagade’s sister, Araweelo, who recently separated and dreams of opening her own business. Though constantly confronted with loss in their volatile region, their everyday efforts showcase ordinary human resilience.

Director Harawe, who grew up in Somalia before moving to Austria, brings an authentic perspective rarely seen. His thoughtful pacing immerses us in their community. While Western media often reduces coverage to fears of terrorism or famine, this film shifts focus to personal stories that transcend labels. Marmagade’s difficult work is underscored by his tender care for Cigaal. And despite facing skepticism as a single woman, Araweelo’s quiet determination to support herself is inspiring.

Through delicate observation of their bond and surroundings, Harawe presents a nuanced view that stays with you. Even amid hardships like drone attacks and poverty, glimpses of beauty in family and the countryside suggest perseverance is possible. This intimate window into their world highlights our shared humanity.

Everyday Struggles and Hopes

Marmagade serves as the main pillar, working hard as a gravedigger to support his family. Yet his primary focus remains on young Cigaal, showing care and affection as a dedicated father. With the village school closing, he faces a tough choice: stay in their humble home or move Cigaal far away for education. His bond with his inquisitive son shines through, as does his will to sacrifice for Cigaal’s future.

The Village Next to Paradise Review

Joining the family is Araweelo, who relocated after her divorce. As a single woman, challenges exist in finding acceptance and opportunities. Undeterred, she dreams of opening her own business through saving. Her quiet perseverance proves inspirational as obstacles are faced. Whether lending support or pursuing her ambitions, Araweelo’s care for her family comes through.

Together, the three find comfort yet also face losses that impact their community. From drone attacks claiming lives to coastal pollution decades ago, hardships are ever-present. A hospital sequence captures the tragic reality of violence all too close. Yet everyday moments showcase cultural traditions and beauty in their relationships, which uplift the spirit.

When a school risks closure, denying children education, the village comes together in protest. Such unity suggests strength through solidarity. Despite difficulties, the strength of their bonds and shared struggles bring hope that better days may come through persevering as a community. Overall, this intimate glimpse highlights our shared humanity as ordinary people worldwide confront hardship with courage, compassion, and faith in each other.

Capturing Beauty Amid Hardship

For a debut feature shot in difficult conditions with many newcomers, the film’s visuals truly shine. Egyptian cinematographer Mostafa El Kashef shows a natural eye with exquisite framing that often places figures prominently yet gently amid vast, rugged landscapes.

Scenes are paced to enhance the feeling of ordinary life unfolding. Careful shots fill each moment with a sense of authentic place. Whether observing family in their one-room home or crowds congregating, his direction immerses us deeply in their world.

Despite heavier themes, Kashef sees beauty. A touching scene depicts Marmagade tenderly watching Cigaal through school gates, their bond conveyed without words. Equal care is taken with shots of Araweelo, highlighting her strength and dignity. Even tense moments, like a hospital after an attack, maintain respect.

We join them on a protest at the coast, its turquoise waters wonderfully capturing local majesty just beyond daily struggles. Visual literacy allows the viewer to really appreciate their surroundings and culture.

Kashef’s gorgeous imagery ensures Harawe’s vision deeply resonates. His storytelling elevates intimate portraits of a community to share their humanity universally. While highlights include a surreal khat moment, the restraint honors real people persevering with compassion through immense challenges.

In witnessing their reality with such artistic sensitivity, this film reminds us that even in the most trying of circumstances, strength and hope can still be found through empathy, courage, and family.

Everyday Triumph Over Tragedy

This film carries powerful messages about ordinary life’s importance, even in Somalia’s most volatile periods. While Western news often emphasizes conflict, Harawe reveals community and family as anchors of hope through hardship.

His protagonists face trauma daily, yet they find solace and purpose in their tight bond. By focusing on the brother, sister, and son’s caring relationships, he highlights humanity over headlines. Their dignified struggle reminds us that us that difficulty is faced and overcome together through compassion.

Perseverance is celebrated as Araweelo, Marmagade, and Cigaal support one another’s dreams, from business to schooling. Though poverty and laws hem them in, inner strength and shared sacrifice carry them forward. Their resilience emphasizes potential wherever people come together in faith of a better future.

Darkness exists undeniably, as a hospital attack scene conveys violence’s reality. But perspectives shift, proving life continues in luminous moments of cultural traditions, humor between relatives, and sunrises illuminating coastlines of natural beauty just outside. Everyday triumph matters as greatly as tragedy.

Harawe presents Somalians as individuals deserving full lives, diverging from a monolithic portrayal. Dignity in ordinary jobs and family bonds subverts thinking of the “other.”His depictions demand we see shared humanity and acknowledge perseverance against all odds. Ultimately, the film spreads a message as timely as ever: in our common struggles lies our common hope.

Capturing Real Lives On Screen

Harawe’s cast brings his characters to life in a raw, authentic way. Though new to acting, these non-professionals inhabit their roles with compelling naturalness.

Ahmed Ali Farah is utterly believable as the tough yet tender Marmagade. His expressive face reveals this man’s sacrifices and love for his son. Young Ahmed Muhammad Salesian likewise touches the heart as Cigaal, ensuring their bond drives the story.

As Araweelo, Anab Ahmed Ibrahim displays quiet strength and compassion that elevate her character. Despite the barriers she faces, her performance inspires by portraying a woman pursuing dreams with patience and grit.

Watching these performers feels like glimpsing real people, not actors. Their unfamiliar faces avoid resembling Hollywood stars, furthering the film’s air of truthfulness.

This fresh approach brings Somalia’s community to life in a way documentation cannot match. Harawe invites viewers straight into these people’s everyday world and struggles, letting their dignity shine through in a way spotlighting “issues” cannot.

By prioritizing authentic casting from the locale over recognizable names, he achieves powerful verisimilitude. The Village Next to Paradise feels real precisely because these lives and this culture are being represented from within rather than gazed upon externally.

The Humanity Within Hardship

This film shares a terroir with other works, plunging viewers straight into distinct life worlds. Like Laurent Cantet’s glimpses of Moroccan daily rhythms, Harawe invites us across perceived borders through three-dimensional characters.

We admire Marmagade, Araweelo, and Cigaal’s perseverance amid hurdles many might see as insurmountable. Their bond feels universal despite Somalia’s specific challenges, from drought to violence. Harawe locates hope where others might see only struggle.

Not all narrative choices work seamlessly. The finale’s bleakness jars a film otherwise portraying community triumph over tragedy. Perhaps Harawe aimed to shake complacency about hardship’s complexity, yet the effect feels tonally awry.

Meanwhile, humor and magic amid hardship ring true to life. When characters chew khat, surrealism captures a ceremonial cultural practice’s psychological escape. Joy persists even under that “leaden blanket” the setting could induce in viewers.

Overall, Harawe upholds each character’s intrinsic worth beyond circumstance. Like Nadine Labaki, who shows humanity transcending Lebanese divisions, he finds dignity where it’s easiest to find only statistics. Both challenge preconceptions through intimate portraits of perseverance against all odds.

The Village Next to Paradise underscores shared hopes beneath superficial differences. Its power lies in locating our common humanity, even in settings remote to many.

Celebrating Resilience Against All Odds

This debut features strong storytelling, delivering impactful portrayals. Harawe invites viewers straight into their lives, persevering through challenges tough to fathom.

We’ve observed Marmagade, Araweelo, and Cigaal’s unbending dedication to family and future, despite obstacles stacked against their happiness. Though set amid strife, global audiences seldom witness their quest firsthand, but their quest feels universal in its exploration of humanity’s indomitable spirit.

Harawe presents a culture and people usually reduced to grim headlines with empathy, care, and artistic vision. Through his non-professional actors’ deeply felt performances and Mostafa El Kashef’s striking camerawork, Somalia’s beauty and community spirit shine beyond hardship headlines.

While not flawless, The Village Next to Paradise achieves its worthy goal of challenging preconceptions by focusing simply on individuals’ resilience and shared hopes beneath surfaces dividing us. In a world often responding to crises with fearmongering, Harawe’s nuanced story reminds us of our common pursuit of dignity, regardless of distance or difference.

I left the film feeling that these inspiring characters and their director had instilled in me a renewed appreciation for the perseverance of the human spirit against all odds. It deserves wide acclaim for this impactful glimpse into lives equally deserving of compassion.

The Review

The Village Next to Paradise

8 Score

The Village Next to Paradise delivers a vivid yet understated glimpse into everyday resilience that transcends its setting. While not flawless, director Mo Harawe's naturalistic portraits challenge preconceptions through empathetic storytelling that locates our shared humanity.

PROS

  • Authentic performances that feel unvarnished
  • Striking cinematography that brings Somalia's beauty to life
  • A heartfelt story about a family's perseverance against hardship
  • Challenges stereotypes by focusing on ordinary lives.
  • Locates hope amid challenging circumstances

CONS

  • The conclusion is totally jarring compared to the rest of the film
  • Narrative pace may frustrate some viewers expecting drama.
  • The depth of contextual issues is only partially addressed.

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: 2024 Cannes Film FestivalAhmed Ali FarahAhmed Mohamud SalebanAnab Ahmed IbrahimAxmen Cali FaaraxCanab Axmed IbraahinDramaFeaturedMo HaraweOliver NeumannSabine MoserThe Village Next to Paradise
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