The New Zealand Herald

‘Powerful film' that deserves attention

Dream holiday becomes nightmare for family in Islamic terrorist ambush

- Toby Woollaston

The idylls of a family holiday are transforme­d into a screaming nightmare in Tunisian writer/director Mehdi Barsaoui’s debut feature. His delicately crafted but intensely powerful film is as much a family drama as it is a high-pitched primal cry and wastes little time planting you smack-bang in the middle of this heart-rending tale.

It is set in Tunisia, where married couple Fares (Sami Bouajila) and Meriem (Najla Ben Abdallah) and their 11-year-old son are on holiday when they unwittingl­y stumble into an Islamic-terrorist ambush that leaves their son fighting for his life and in desperate need of a liver transplant. With time running out, the couple desperatel­y look for a donor, but their search leads them down moral crossroads and uncovers dark secrets that threaten to derail their marriage and their son’s life.

Belying his lack of experience as a director, Barsaoui appears to be in total control of his craft and deftly weaves plenty of subtextual commentary into the fabric of this compelling drama. Most notably, patriarchy within an Arab-world context is explored as the couple’s progressiv­e ideals lock horns with Tunisia’s “archaic” laws. It’s a touchy subject to breach, but Barsaoui skilfully juggles this, along with a minefield of other issues, with minimal fuss and a pin-sharp tone.

It’s a style that appears to be straight out of the Asghar Farhadi

film-book ( A Separation, Everybody Knows) and A Son’s wonderfull­y focused form is similarly achieved, utilising little in the way of flamboyant cinematic embellishm­ents; the musical score is sparse but effective, the cinematogr­aphy is understate­d but beautiful, and the screenplay never succumbs to needless histrionic­s.

Barsaoui (who definitely seems to be a talent worth keeping an eye on) appears to know exactly how to use subtlety to his advantage and is aided by two fantastic leads, who offer solid performanc­es. Bouajila, in particular, cuts the pained figure of a man desperatel­y in search of where his loyalties lie. But Barsaoui’s evenhanded script is careful not to lose sight of Meriem, a strong female character, who stands to lose not only her son but her husband as well.

A Son is an exciting and understate­dly complex debut from a fresh voice in Arab cinema and is a movie that deserves your attention.

 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? A family holiday becomes a nightmare in Tunisian writer/director Mehdi Barsaoui’s debut feature film.
Photo / Supplied A family holiday becomes a nightmare in Tunisian writer/director Mehdi Barsaoui’s debut feature film.

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