Baltimore Sun

Ahmed finds catharsis in blistering short film

‘The Long Goodbye’ channels star’s fears while drawing from immigrant clashes

- By Jake Coyle

Of all the Oscar nominees this year, you would be hard pressed to find a more potent film than “The Long Goodbye.” It’s blistering­ly visceral, harrowingl­y violent and desperatel­y urgent — all in under 12 minutes.

“The Long Goodbye,” directed by Aneil Karia, starring Riz Ahmed and written by both, was nominated for best live-action short and won at the recent Academy Awards.

The film is initially naturalist­ic, immersed in the pre-wedding preparatio­ns of a South Asian family in suburban England. The concerns are familiar. Where a chair should go. Who wrote “Blinded by the Light.”

But Ahmed’s character spies out the window unmarked vans of masked white militants arriving outside. Daily life is violently interrupte­d. They soon begin rounding up people and executing the men. The nightmaris­h scene culminates in a furious monologue performed while staggering down the street by Ahmed, quoting from his song, “Where You From” — a passionate testimony of cross-cultural identity.

“Now everybody everywhere want their country back,” Ahmed says into the camera. “If you want me back to where I’m from then, bruv, I need a map.”

To Ahmed, “The Long Goodbye,” which is streaming on YouTube, channels his own fears while drawing from current clashes for immigrants and migrants against rising swells of racism draped in nationalis­m.

“In post-Brexit Britain, we were feeling this rising drumbeat of xenophobia all around. And it’s starting to feel a little bit deafening. You get to the point where you’ve got to grab someone and say, ‘Do you hear this? Are you feeling this? Am I having a panic attack?’ ” Ahmed said in a recent interview from London. “Aneil and I wanted to urgently tell a story about this, to spill our feelings, to unearth our nightmares and put them out into the world.”

The scenes that play out in “The Long Goodbye” appear more like those that might occur in more remote global corners.

But to Ahmed, the film reflects both the day-to-day emotional reality of diverse peoples in increasing­ly divisive Western democracie­s, and the on-the-ground actuality in other places.

“Really, where this story takes places is within our psyches. But it also takes

place within our ancestral memories,” says Ahmed. “It takes place in Ukraine right now. It takes place in India, with the pogroms last year. It takes place in Myanmar. It’s taken place in the United States. It’s taken place in Bosnia.”

“The Long Goodbye” wasn’t the only Oscar nominee to wrestle with these issues — or the only one with which Ahmed was connected.

Ahmed is also an executive producer on “Flee,” the animated documentar­y about an Afghanista­n migrant’s twisting path to a new life in Denmark and, ultimately, to selfaccept­ance. “Flee” was the first movie nominated for best documentar­y, best animated film and best foreign language film, but it ultimately didn’t take home any Oscars.

“‘The Long Goodbye’ is about identity, home and belonging. And ‘Flee’ is about identity, home and

belonging,” says Ahmed. “The conversati­on of our times seems to be about identity, home and who belongs where.”

Ahmed made history last year as the first Muslim nominated for lead actor, for “The Sound of Metal,” in which he played a drummer losing his hearing.

Ahmed, 39, who was born in Wembley outside London to Pakistani parents, has often rapped about his complex feelings around identity and about making his way “in this business of Britishnes­s.” “Maybe I’m from everywhere and nowhere,” he raps in “Where You From.”

Ahmed has worked with USC Annenberg Inclusion Initiative researcher­s to highlight how Muslims are often marginaliz­ed or stereotype­d in film and television. Out of 8,965 speaking characters identified across 200 top-grossing films released between 2017 and 2019,

just 1.6% were Muslim, but 30% were perpetuato­rs of violence.

Though its second half turns abruptly violent, the fleeting family scenes early in “The Long Goodbye” are enough to constitute something rarely captured in mainstream film — a Muslim family simply existing.

While Ahmed grants “The Long Goodbye” and “Flee” are very tied to the current moment, he also sees them as reflecting an eternal struggle — one that can also be heard in the Lin-Manuel Mirandapen­ned “Dos Oruguitas,” the “Encanto” ballad and immigratio­n parable that was up for best song at the Oscars, but lost to Billie Eilish and Finneas O’Connell’s “No Time to Die” from the James Bond film “No Time to Die.”

“Stories about refugees, stories about intoleranc­e, films like ‘The Long Goodbye,’ films like ‘Flee,’ are confrontin­g us with questions that on some level, no matter who we are, are always asking ourselves,” says Ahmed. “That’s why I think these are timeless stories. You look at the Aeneid. Aeneas is kicked out of Troy. It’s ransacked, and he’s a refugee.

“He went on to found Rome, by the way. Not bad for a refugee,” adds Ahmed, chuckling. “Maybe up there with Apple and Steve Jobs, a Syria refugee.”

But if “The Long Goodbye” seems grim, it’s also stirring in its clarion defiance, sounded straight at the camera. In its radical shifts, Karia’s film, itself, breaks free of convention.

“When you tell your story, you’re sharing your experience with someone,” says Ahmed. “You’re putting yourself out there to connect. And when other people connect with that experience, man, that is hope. Hope is connection.”

 ?? SOMESUCH AND LEFT HANDED FILMS ?? Riz Ahmed stars in the Oscar-winning live action-short “The Long Goodbye,” which is streaming on YouTube.
SOMESUCH AND LEFT HANDED FILMS Riz Ahmed stars in the Oscar-winning live action-short “The Long Goodbye,” which is streaming on YouTube.

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