'Good Lie' a moving story


(MENAFN- Arab Times) The movie poster for 'The Good Lie' features a smiling Reese Witherspoon front and center. But truth be told neither Witherspoon nor her character is the film's star not in the essential sense. The real stars are the Sudanese children at the bottom of the poster their backs to us trudging across an empty sun-scorched expanse.

'The Good Lie' tells a fascinating story that of the so-called 'Lost Boys' (and girls) of Sudan youngsters orphaned by the bitter war that engulfed their country beginning in 1983 forcing many to trek for hundreds and hundreds of miles over several years in some cases to safety. And admirably the filmmakers keep these youngsters and the young adults they became central in their storytelling. They may have a Hollywood star on their hands but this isn't a Hollywood star vehicle.

It's probably safe to say that many Americans know little or nothing about the humanitarian effort begun in 2000 to resettle thousands of young refugees from Sudan in US cities. For that reason alone this movie directed by Philippe Falardeau is worth seeing. Luckily it's also a compelling film occasionally a bit too earnest perhaps or overly broad in its humor but often deeply moving.

Extensive

The story is fictional but based on extensive research by screenwriter Margaret Nagle who interviewed hundreds of 'Lost Boys.' The film begins in a southern Sudan village where two brothers Theo and Mamere and their sister Abital suddenly find themselves orphans when attackers come rampaging through killing anyone in sight.

Since their father was the village chief that title now falls to Theo the elder brother. With a few other youngsters they start a treacherous trek out of Sudan. They escape mass slaughter yet again by crossing a river but lose Theo who saves them by sacrificing his own safety. Eventually the small group winds up at the Kakuma refugee camp in Kenya.

Fast forward 13 years. Mamere Abital and close friends Jeremiah and Paul have become a family unit. One day their names appear on a list of refugees chosen for resettlement in America. Joyously they board the plane.

Upon arrival in New York the group is forcibly separated; boys to Kansas City Abital to Boston. Despite that painful setback the boys settle into new lives as best they can. Helping them is Carrie (Witherspoon) a tough-skinned type who works for an employment agency. They need jobs to stay in America and also to pay the government back for their plane tickets.

As the men adjust there are a few too many culture-clash jokes: They aren't familiar with light switches telephones jello molds the vast variety of types of Cheerios (that one's funny) ice rinks. But the cast is wonderful. The 'Lost Boys' are played by actors of Sudanese descent and they're terrific especially Arnold Oceng as Mamere who struggles to lead the group with dignity and determination even as he chides himself for surviving when Theo did not.

It's fascinating to read the biographies of this well-chosen cast. Oceng fled the war zone at 2 years old. Actor-rapper Emmanuel Jal who plays his talented but troubled friend Paul was a child soldier during the war and like many war orphans doesn't know when he was born. Ger Duany who plays religious-minded Jeremiah was also a child soldier and gained refugee status in the United States at age 16. The lovely Kouth Wiel who plays Abital was born in a refugee camp.

Also:

LOS ANGELES: 'Orphan Black' star Jordan Gavaris has been added to the cast of 'Sea of Trees' opposite Matthew McConaughey Ken Watanabe and Naomi Watts. Gus Van Sant is wrapping principal photography on the drama filmed on location in Japan and Massachusetts.

McConaughey and Watanabe portray men on a journey of reflection and survival in the Aokigahara a mysterious dense forest at the base of Japan's Mount Fuji where a reportedly large amount of suicides occur. Watts plays McConaughey's wife.

Producers are Gil Netter Ken Kao Kevin Halloran F Gary Gray Brian Dobbins Allen Fischer and Chris Sparling who wrote the screenplay. (Agencies)

Alex Walton and Ken Kao's sales production and financing company Bloom introduced 'The Sea of Trees' to buyers Cannes and by the end of the festival had sold out the world. Post-production is under way in Los Angeles. (Agencies)

By Jocelyn Noveck

By: Jocelyn Noveck


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