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The Kite Runner

Rated - 3 stars

Khaled Hosseini's best-seller arrives on the big screen just in time for Oscar season - and has already been rewarded with two Golden Globe nominations.

It's a middling effort overall, although it has some good passages and points of interest. I haven't read the novel, but apparently this is a reasonably faithful condensation, with a few shortcuts towards the end. Most of the book's fans seem satisfied, but that's not necessarily a good sign for anybody else. Seeing the movie persuaded me not to bother with the novel.

Most of the first hour plays out (in Dari and Pashtu) in an uninterrupted flashback to Kabul in 1978. Amir (played as a boy by Zekeria Ebrahimi) is the privileged son of a well-to-do but outspoken father, Baba (Homayoun Ershadi) an intellectual who is openly contemptuous of the mullahs. Amir's best friend is Hassan (Ahmad Khan Mahmoodzada), the son of Ali, the family servant.

While Amir is bookish and a bit of a coward, Hassan is so devoted he bravely stands up to the local bullies and takes the blows his friend runs away from. And quotes The Magnificent Seven while he does it. Kabul is a poor Third World city, and there are palpable social and religious tensions, but it's also possible to have fun, throw a party, watch a western movie or fly a kite.

Amir, like his father, is a gifted practitioner of this sport, which in the aggressive Afghan version involves cutting up your opponents to slice through their string with yours. The last kite still flying is the winner. Hassan helps his friend by running after the loose kites - spoils for the victor - and he has an unerring instinct for guessing where they'll land.

Tragically, one day Hassan is cornered by local bullies led by Assef, who rapes him - a shocking turn of events which has necessitated the emigration of the child actors involved, and which might strike some as gratuitous. It's discreetly shot, but only exists to traumatize poor Amir, spying and suffering in the shadows.

He feels so guilty afterwards he spurns his friend and frames him for theft. Shortly afterwards, he and his father flee to America when the Soviets invade.

The film fast-forwards to the late 80s. Amir (now played by Khalid Abdalli) is a young writer trying to get published. He lives with Baba, who now works as a gas station attendant and is showing his age.

The wind goes right out of the movie's sails at this point. There's a romance with another immigrant, a general's daughter. There's the old man's illness. There's culture clash, Tradition battering heads with the New World. It's nicely acted - especially by Ershadi (The Taste Of Cherry) - but none of this is as interesting as what has come before, and frankly I'd rather have stayed with Hassan, whose struggles must have been ten times more dramatic. The movie is frank about the Amir's cowardice, but seems oblivious to the author's solipsism and vanity.

Eventually Amir gets a call that draws him back to his homeland, the year before the September 11 attack. His excursion into Taliban territory is vicious and terrible, but at last he has a chance to redeem himself.

Directed by the versatile - and variable - Marc Forster (whose CV includes Monster's Ball; Finding Neverland; Stranger than Fiction and the next Bond movie), and adapted by David Benioff (The 25th Hour), The Kite Runner acknowledges personal guilt but only to expiate it in risibly melodramatic fashion.

It's a real achievement to make anyone feel sorry for the Taliban, but this manipulative movie paints them not as vicious religious zealots - which would certainly seem justified - but as hypocritical pederasts - which may not be.

Forster scarcely engages with religion or politics. There's one strong scene when Amir is castigated for his arrogance by a man running an orphanage, but that's about it.

Almost everything that's interesting about the film is in the background: the recreation of Kabul in comparatively peaceful times; the landscapes (actually China, but an effective stand-in all the same); later, a horrific stoning, the half time entertainment at a football game.

Then there are the kites, which are pretty enough, but evidently computer generated. I'm intrigued to know how Afghan strings slice through each other in the way they're shown to here - cat gut? - and couldn't help feeling sorry for the innocent American kite flyer who gets the same treatment. In any case, I wish Forster would've stopped pulling our strings for a minute. This sentimental treatment risks trivializing a situation that needs understanding as much as it needs sympathy.

Tom Charity
tom.charity@lovefilm.com

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Critics' Reviews

Variety

Nuanced perfs and standout production design convey story in cinematic terms, preserving the narrative's emotional power and historical sweep as it spans continents and decades

Hollywood Reporter

The film feels totally convincing in all its technical aspects, including its use of Chinese locations to double for the story's Afghan setting

Rating of 4 
	  stars out of 5 Wally Hammond, Time Out

Adapted from the best-selling novel by Afghan-born American writer Khaled Hosseini, this accessible, deftly-directed... read more on www.timeout.com

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Members' Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 4 starsAfghani family values and an eye on their problems

PaulaWestwood from Ashton-Under-Lyne [Highly rated reviewer] , 01/01/2008

The story of boyhood friends from each side of the caste system in Afghanistan, this brings home the actual significance of personal tragedies war, disputes and caste systems (in fact bias of any kind) cause, and the vile atrocities and nastiness of all regimes who prey on the easily influenced, weak and displaced. As it is concentrated mainly on one family it brings home the whole reality of suffering such armed disputes of this nature cause. After the fall of Afghanistan to the Russians, those who could afford it fled, and the ones left behind faced hardships that if anything worstened after the Russian withdrawal and the new 'regime' of the Taliban started their own sort of pogrom. There is no hollywood glitz glamour or hype here, just an accurate (slightly watered down for various reasons) following of an a book. If you have any interest in recent history, or world affairs as not thrown at you by some media rag or biased TV news reporting, this will be worthwhile, almost essential, viewing.

  210 out of 211 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 5 starsKite-fighting and friendship

IanStewart IanStewart from Melton Mowbray [Highly rated reviewer] , 13/03/2008

This film’s story begins in Kabul, Afghanistan, in the 1970s. We meet two 12-year-old boys, Amir and Hassan. The two are close friends. But there’s also tension in their friendship: Amir is the son of a well-to-do family; he is a Pashtun, the ruling class in the country at that time. Hassan is the son of the family’s servant, and is a Hazara, a racial group looked down on by many Pashtuns. Though Hassan is Amir’s friend, he never forgets he is also his loyal servant.

A central theme in the movie is that of “kite-fighting”, a popular sport in Afghanistan. In a big tournament, hundreds of kites can be in flight at the same time. Contestants coat the strings of their kites with broken glass; the object of the game is to cut the strings of other kites, with the last kite flying being declared the winner. As part of the game, boys run to pick up and keep each defeated kite. Hassan is not only Amir’s dedicated supporter in the game – he is the most talented kite-runner in Kabul.

The story moves on to the Russian invasion of Afghanistan, during which Amir and his father flee to America. Following the expulsion of the Russians comes the tyrannical rule of the Taliban. By this time, Amir, now married and in his early twenties, has lost track of Hassan. Amir’s uncle calls from Pakistan, begging Amir to return to Kabul. Amir reluctantly agrees, and from that point events gain momentum until the climax of the story.

Unlike some other reviewers, I think the screenplay does a pretty good job of staying true to Khaled Hosseini’s book. Of course, in a film lasting just over 2 hours, a lot of content has to be cut out, but I’d say the movie does manage to capture the main turning-points of the story, so that interest never flags.

I’m usually not one to go much on special effects – but in this film, during the kite-fighting sequences, we often find ourselves ABOVE the kites, looking down on them as they wheel and swoop in the sky, with the houses and streets of Kabul way below them. This is a thrilling experience, made even more so by energetic swishing sounds as the warring kites zoom past (a bit like the swishing of the swords in a kung-fu movie).

There’s splendid acting from the whole cast, especially the two boy actors who play the young Amir and Hassan.

  58 out of 59 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 3 starsslightly dissapointing

tracy39 from Cambridge [Highly rated reviewer] , 07/01/2008

After reading the book I was really looking forward to seeing the film, and I did enjoy it , the acting was great, particularily the boy who played Hassan, as was the set design and cinematography, but I didn't get the same heart wrenching feeling from the film as I did the book and perhaps would have enjoyed the film more if I had seen it first. I found it a bit lacking emotionally, I think the story had been watered down for American audiences, which was a huge shame, and it missed out huge parts of the book which were important to the story.

  49 out of 49 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 0 starsthe kite runner

rannoch from Gourock , 13/09/2008

This film was dreadful, slow uneventful and above all almost completely with english subtitles - why o why can't film makers just make films in english.

  32 out of 52 people found this review helpful

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Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 5 starsGreat movie, strong casting, an unforgetable experience!

Edua from Hampton , 25/06/2009

The Kite Runner is a great opportunity to get familiar with Afghanistan before and during the war and also the Taliban regime. The character lines are building up powerfully parallel to the historycal facts evolving. The moral value of the movie is shockingly truthful and convincing mirrored by two childrens' lives. This film definitely brings you closer to the middle-eastern culture, lifestyle and history. If you have not been involved beforehand, you are very likely to read the book after just as I will, as you want to know more about this culture and background.

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful

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Rated - 4 starsBrilliant

Lizbet from Ely [Highly rated reviewer] , 19/06/2008

This was a facinating film and I was transfixed with emotion for the whole film. This film needs to be watched.

  4 out of 4 people found this review helpful

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