An outsider’s critical view of a Muslim community in the arid, North African country of Chad. The filmmaker moved to France decades ago. His protagonist, Amina, was shunned by family and expelled from school when she got pregnant at age 15.
Everyone roots for the underdog, especially when their cause is just. And that’s all this film offers except for high end photography. Such a feeling for color, texture, luminosity, and space. That’s what drove me to see the next scene more than the predictable, feel good story based on gender politics. But yes, it was also good to see a protagonist so sweet, gentle, indomitable, rebellious, and devoted. Perhaps she’s even unique in cinema. I have no idea how real she might appear to the people who live there.
The ‘sacred bonds’ here are only between women - suggesting a society as dysfunctional at the family level as the nation of Chad is politically.
If he had said “I admire your independence. May I love and protect you as your husband?”
he might have gotten a different response. Or maybe not. She was used to doing the protecting, not receiving it. Regardless, the above visual is typical of the painterly quality.
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- various thoughts
Since Amina’s sister was wearing bracelets worth 600,000 CFA (1080 USD) we can assume that she was not raised in poverty. She had options in life, but they were lost when she got pregnant as a teenager - and as she explains to her daughter, she was not raped. She was in love with the baby-father - and expresses no regrets. She resents being cast out by her family - but practices the Muslim faith that condemns her. She kneels in prayer daily outside the mosque she is forbidden to enter. Yet she also does not trust the imam to help with her daughter.
Why does the neighbor allow her to cudgel him in response to his rape of her daughter? And why did the daughter conceal that fact until after her abortion? Shame is a strong motivator in this community. But still Amina, desperate to help her daughter, offers to sell her body to the man who has loaned her money and wants to marry her. She really is an outcast and rebel- while her daughter would rather kill herself than live that kind of life.
Regarding that man who lends her money, Brahim, he’s not really given a fair shake by Amina and various movie reviewers. I assume that her offer to sell herself was an act of desperation, but it was also an insult he did not deserve. The film gives us no reason to believe that his offer of love and protection was not sincere.
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The review in the New York Times immediately put the film into the triumphant Feminism of American gender politics - and maybe that was intended. It began as follows:

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