Yasmin
Movie Review:
With
“Yasmin” and his earlier film “Gas Attack”
(about an anthrax breakout), director Kenneth Glenaan seems
to be studying the atmosphere and climate of our nation.
The climate – both films suggest – is one of
fear.
This
film opens with a scene in which a middle-aged Pakistani
man going to open up his shop. On the grating, someone has
written ‘Pakis go home’ with spray paint.
The
man, we learn, is Yasmin’s father. There is also Nasa,
her brother. They make up a Muslim, Pakistani family in
the North of England. She is
married (not out of choice) to a man who speaks little English,
and prefers his pet goat to her.
About
half way through the film, the planes hit the Twin Towers,
and the world changes. People start looking at Yasmin differently.
Since she is not white, British and Christian, she fits
the mould for a potential terrorist, as do the rest of her
family, and neighbourhood. Everywhere Yasmin turns, she
seems to see irrational fear and hatred, even from the people
she considered her friends.
I was
surprised by how powerful I found the film (especially its
sad, touching ending). The reason it has the impact it does
is because it does not do what too many people do; see the
family of Muslims as just that: a family of Muslims. It
sees them as flawed human beings. The father is very
proud of his name, and will not let Yasmin or Nasa do anything
to bring embarrassment to him (little does he know, Nasa
spends his free time selling
weed to teenage girls). Yasmin is sort of proud too; she
gives Nasa (and her husband) food, but will not take any
cheek from them. She reacts with anger when people are racist
to her friends, and kicks her husband out when he hits her.
One
day the police bash her door down, and arrest her; they
are looking for her husband, whom they (wrongly) consider
a terrorist. The new laws concerning terrorism are so vague
and open to interpretation, that anyone that gives any reason
to make the police believe he or she is even potentially
a terrorist can be held in prison for pretty much as long
as they consider necessary. These laws do no encourage tolerance
and open-mindedness in society.
If the
film is flawed, it is in its portrayal of white people.
They are too often seen as just the people giving the Muslims
a rough time. The only one
that I had any sympathy for is the guy who could have been
her boyfriend, if things had turned out differently.
But
they did not, and on September 11th, 2001, three thousand
people died, and the public wanted someone to blame. A lot
of people employed hatred
because they thought it would be part of the solution, not
realising that hatred was the cause. Of course, not everyone
did, and the film could have
been a bit more even-handed.
I think
the point of the film is that tolerance and understanding
are the only ways we can achieve happiness and peace. If
the world had more, then
perhaps the events of September 11th could have been avoided.
But that was then and this is now, and we have to face the
problem as it stands.
Hatred is not the answer. It never is.
****
(out of 5)
Adam Whyte
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