kurdistan

Tonight’s Film: ‘Triage’ With Special Guest Linden MacIntyre

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February 24  |  2010 Film Festival, HRWFF Special Guests, Triage  |   julie

HRWFF | Special Guest | Linden MacIntyre

Journalist and author Linden MacIntyre will introduce tonight’s film, Triage, Danis Tanovic’s latest exploration of how battle alters the human heart.

The film stars Colin Farrell as a war photographer. High in the arid mountains of Kurdistan pursuing a war without borders, Mark (Colin Farrell) and David (Jamie Sives) witness and capture horrendous images, from combatants pulverized by ammunition, to a doctor who works heroically to save the wounded but shoots dead those he knows he can’t help. The friends begin to disagree over whether to stay or flee the chaos. Eventually they separate and lose contact, and Mark must return home to Ireland alone.

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Welcome: Program Notes

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January 5  |  2010 Film Festival, Welcome  |   julie

Welcome | Human Rights Watch Film Festival

Young Kurdish refugee Bilal (Firat Ayverdi), is driven to escape his war-torn life and begin anew in England.

His journey is stopped short on the shores of Calais, France, but his determination to reach his girlfriend across the channel is fierce. Treated as an outsider by his fellow refugees, he is befriended by swimming instructor Simon (Vincent Lindon), a man who has chosen his isolation, but warms to Bilal’s passion to reach his true love.

We enter the world of refugees caught between worlds, trapped in a place where they are living in fear, and those who risk helping them face retribution.

Ayverdi’s performance is an impressive debut, conveying a combination of desperation and hope that a future holds promises that will erase the abuses of his past. Although the film centres on the friendship that grows between Bilal and Simon, it is clear that their situation is not an isolated case. Bilal is one of thousands traversing Europe under cover and by any means necessary, while authorities hunt down refugees who have avoided the bureaucratic and seemingly impossible processes that would allow them safe passage.

Welcome highlights one of the perils of globalization — that migration of the persecuted can result in continuing the suffering that they sought to escape.

Program Notes by Alex Rogalski

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Triage: Program Notes

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January 3  |  2010 Film Festival, Triage  |   julie

Colin Farrell and Jamie Sives in Triage

“It is only the dead who have seen the end of war.” This quote from Plato shadows the story of Triage, Danis Tanovic’s latest exploration of how battle alters the human heart. But unlike his Academy Award-winning No Man’s Land, this new drama follows not the soldier but the chronicler.

Colin Farrell plays Mark Walsh, a war photographer in the late eighties. High in the arid mountains of Kurdistan pursuing a war without borders, Mark and David (Jamie Sives) witness and capture horrendous images, from combatants pulverized by ammunition, to a doctor who works heroically to save the wounded but shoots dead those he knows he can’t help.

Worse, the friends begin to disagree over whether to stay or flee the chaos. Eventually they separate and lose contact, and Mark must return home to Ireland alone.

Triage is a slow burn, gathering more and more emotional impact as it goes. Working at the centre of this moving character study, Farrell is terrific. But it is Christopher Lee as Walsh’s therapist who is the revelation, giving perhaps his most detailed dramatic performance of a very long career.

Program Notes by Cameron Bailey

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