Essay On Osama

Words: 907
Pages: 4

Osama, directed by Siddiq Barmark, sorrowfully tells the story of a young girl trapped within the Taliban puritanical dictatorship. The director uses real-life backdrops, props and actors to paint a hauntingly authentic recollection of life in the fundamentalist Islamic movement. It shies away from overly grandeurs retelling of the occupation, but rather shows how it’s ideological evil trickles into the small crevices of individual lives.

Although Osama follows the main protagonist and her experience as a marginalized female, the movie also touches on other perspectives under the Taliban. The notion of womanhood carries on throughout the film, as we watch many strong women in defiance of the regime. This story is told against a larger context of institutional sadism against women. The opening scene shows fierce women in blue burkhas holding a demonstration, campaigning for work rights, only to be met with brutal repercussions by the militia. This constant repression of women’s rights are shown throughout the movie, such as the keeping of wives as slaves by men, stoning of women who are independent of men and the constant patrol of women in public. Osama can be described as a piece of feminist film, as it tells the story of a young woman
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The movie does not try to gloss over the uncomfortable aspects, but succeeds in also not glorifying the war and pain. It tells the story of Osama as it is, unhappy ending and all. He did not try to amuse and accommodate the audience, but rather give a relatively palatable taste of the bitter reality. He says to the viewers, ‘This is the Afghani struggle’, which can be confronting but is at least, true. In addition to the effects of 9/11, this movie shed light for the Western world on the living standards the Taliban rule. It encourages the international community to realize the humanity of the Afghani