The Province

Children on the brink of disaster

- — Chris Knight

There’s something gut-wrenchingl­y effective about a child-in-peril movie, whether it’s played for laughs — think Home Alone — or with deadly seriousnes­s, as in Denis Villeneuve’s Prisoners. But if that nail-biting tension is too much, be warned: Capernaum will have you chewing your fingers off.

Let’s start with Zain (Zain Al Rafeea), a 12-year-old growing up in the slums of Beirut. I say 12 but his age is a little uncertain; his parents didn’t register his birth and can’t recall the date. The movie also isn’t clear about how many siblings he has, but it’s a lot. He’s closest to his little sister Sahar, until she’s sold into marriage and taken away. She’s 11.

Wait — did you think Zain was the child in peril here? I suppose he is, but his plight is nothing to that of Yonas, a toddler and the son of illegal immigrant Rahil (Yordanos Shiferaw). After Zain runs away from home, he is taken in by this Ethiopian woman and winds up providing babysittin­g services in exchange for room and board.

When Rahil is caught up in a police raid, Zain struggles to find enough money to feed himself and the baby, which is where the real peril sets in. There’s a shot of the older kid pulling the younger in a makeshift pram constructe­d from a pilfered skateboard and a cooking pot, with vehicular traffic whizzing by inches away from them. It’s terrifying.

Capernaum — the unfortunat­ely obscure title means a confused jumble — is the latest from writer/director Nadine Labaki, whose 2011 film Where Do We Go Now? won the People’s Choice award at the Toronto film festival. This one doesn’t quite fit the definition of a crowdpleas­er, but it did win both the Jury Prize and the prize of the ecumenical jury at Cannes last May.

It’s a remarkably humanist story, although the set-up is a bit of a bait-and-switch. Trailers suggest this is the tale of Zain suing his parents, and indeed an early scene in the film has him declaring the reason for his legal action: “Because I was born.” It’s basically a citizen’s arrest for failing to provide the necessitie­s of life.

But the movie is less a courtroom drama than an examinatio­n of the plight of the world’s underclass.

Labaki drew many of the story’s elements from real life, including her pint-sized star; the real Zain is a Syrian refugee who had never acted before, and now lives in Norway.

So presumably his anger and rough speech come from a real place, but that doesn’t make the performanc­e any less amazing.

 ?? — SONY PICTURES CLASSICS ?? Zain Al Rafeea as Zain, right, and Boluwatife Treasure Bankole as Yonas in Capernaum.
— SONY PICTURES CLASSICS Zain Al Rafeea as Zain, right, and Boluwatife Treasure Bankole as Yonas in Capernaum.

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