Nowhere in Africa

Nowhere in Africa

***1/2

Reviewed by: Jennie Kermode

The release of this film was much delayed, so it's arrived in cinemas with little advanced publicity, and is consequently struggling to pull in audiences - this in addition to the fact that it's filmed in a mixture of German and Swahili, and often badly translated, reducing its general accessibility.

I'd like to say that it's worth the effort, since a lot of it is very good, but it has several flaws. The first of these is that it's far too long - two and a half hours, with a great deal of repetition. It could easily have been cut down. Repetition is part of the point of the plot, as we watch a German refugee couple living in Kenya during the Second World War squabble and make up repeatedly, but it doesn't take as much repetition as this to get the point across.

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This is the film's second major flaw: ultimately, it's hard to care about whether or not the couple do stay together. Each seems much happier when they are apart. They get on each other's nerves and don't seem to have much underlying affection for one another; they just have really good sex every once in a while and assume this means they're in love. At the start of the film they're staying together for the sake of their young child; at the end of it, they've found another young child to force them into what the audience can only expect will be another decade or two of suffering.

What saves this film is its own relationship with Kenya, the performances of the African supporting cast and also those of the two young girls playing (at different ages) the couple's child. Most of the usual cliches about going native are avoided, and the film is refreshingly matter-of-fact about the girl's experiences in crossing the cultural divide. The Kenyan tribespeople are neither patronised nor revered. There are no ferocious animals nor overplayed grotesqueries to force the pace of the story; the only monsters are those which the couple bring with them. What remains is a rich and lively picture of a successfully multicultural and multiethnic society, which not only contrasts dramatically with the film's brief portrait of Nazi Germany but has plenty of valuable suggestions for the modern international age.

Reviewed on: 27 Jun 2007
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A poignant Nazi era lesson in cultural understanding and tolerance.
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Read more Nowhere in Africa reviews:

David Stanners ****1/2
Angus Wolfe Murray ****1/2

Director: Caroline Link

Writer: Caroline Link, based on the novel by Stephanie Zweig

Starring: Juliane Kohler, Merab Ninidze, Lea Kurka, Karoline Eckertz, Sidede Onyulo, Matthias Habich

Year: 2001

Runtime: 140 minutes

BBFC: 15 - Age Restricted

Country: Germany

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