War Witch
War Witch sp – We saw this Oscar nominated movie for best foreign film a few days before the Academy Award ceremony. It is the Canadian entry since that is the home country of Director Kim Nguyen who also wrote the screenplay which he told our screening audience in a post film interview that he has been writing on and off for 10 years. It is set somewhere in the African Congo where a rebel army abducts children and makes them soldiers. The movie, which was primarily filmed in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, appears to be quite authentic. It  follows Komono, a 12 year old girl, for two years, starting with the point where she is captured, made to shoot her parents and become a soldier. Circumstances lead her captors to believe that she has special powers, can see things that are going to happen and therefore protect them. She is played by a first time local actress Rachel Mwanza, who actually grew up in the streets without a family and was chosen by Kim Nguyen after auditioning over 2000 young girls. She is on the screen just about all the time and expresses clearly her inner pain and emotions well as her own thoughts and images with a little help from the visual effects of the film and the voiceover in French by another actress (with English subtitles of course). It also has a great soundtrack of what appeared to be African folk music which captured the atmosphere and mood of the film. Mwanza for her first film has already won the the Silver Bear for Best Actress at the Berlin International Film Festival earlier this month and also won the award for the Best Actress in the 2012 Tribeca Film Festival. In the film she is accompanied most of the time by another child soldier who is an Albino known as the Magician, also very well played by a local actor Serge Kanyinda. This movie presents us with a glimpse at a lesser known atrocity which has occurred in modern times. It is also a simple and beautiful, if not, sad love story . It well deserves the recognition which it is receiving. (2012)