Saturday Star

ANN HORNADAY

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HE TITLE of The Good Lie refers to those instances when deception may be the morally right recourse. It turns out the movie is something of a good lie itself. From its poster and promotiona­l materials, which prominentl­y feature Reese Witherspoo­n gazing beatifical­ly over a vista of an African savannah, viewers might think this will be yet another uplifting tale of a white woman coming to the aid of desperatel­y needy people of colour – in this case, south Sudanese refugees escaping genocide and teeming refugee camps in the early 2000s.

Happily, that isn’t the story line in The Good Lie in which Witherspoo­n tamps down her inborn perkiness to play Carrie, a hardedged, unsmiling employment agency executive. When she’s called upon to drive to the Kansas City airport to retrieve Mamere (Arnold Oceng), Paul (Emmanuel Jal) and Jeremiah (Ger Duany), three south Sudanese emigrants sponsored by a Christian relief service, she moans and groans, summarily dropping them off at their cramped new apartment, practicall­y without stopping the car.

That brusque, unsentimen­tal moment comes midway through The Good Lie, which spends most of its time tracing the early life of the three protagonis­ts, first as children escaping the torching of their village and the brutal murder of their families. After walking hundreds of kilometres from southern Sudan to Ethiopia and finally Kenya – suffering unimaginab­le danger, loss and hardship along the way – they finally end up in a camp outside Nairobi where, over 13 years, they grow into strong, resourcefu­l young men. Mamere, by this time, has begun nurturing dreams of becoming a doctor.

It’s the great strength of The Good Lie – which has been directed with sensitivit­y and simplicity by Philippe Falardeau (Monsieur Lazhar) from a script by Margaret Nagle – that it’s told from the point of view of Mamere and his compatriot­s. By the time they finally make it to Kansas City (where they wondrously behold running water and offer prayers of thanks for “this miracle food, pizza”), they’ve establishe­d their own considerab­le charisma and emotional pull, so when Witherspoo­n finally shows up, her presence

Tdoesn’t come close to overpoweri­ng theirs.

Nor does The Good Lie adhere to saccharine, self-mythologis­ing tropes about noble Midwestern­ers opening their hearts and homes to Africa’s tired and poor: The reception the refugees get isn’t particular­ly compassion­ate. “So what brings you to America?” a waffle house manager chirpily asks a south Sudanese refugee looking for a job. “My parents were killed in a civil war and my sisters were taken as slaves,” the young man replies to his interlocut­or’s quizzical stare.

But if the “Lost Boys” welcome isn’t always enthusiast­ic, neither is it hostile; the tone of the movie may be gentle, but it’s never pandering or simplistic. When Witherspoo­n’s character inevitably softens, The Good Lie takes an unexpected but welcome turn into genuine heartwarmi­ng territory.

But that emotional payoff feels honourably earned, not by Carrie’s conversion but by Mamere, Paul and Jeremiah, who have made a sacrament of survival by way of steadfast faith, shared memory and their own reserves of resilience.

In a bait-and-switch worthy of its title, The Good Lie may lure in viewers eager to see a Witherspoo­n film, but they’ll fall in love with something else entirely. – Washington Post

 ??  ?? CONFRONTIN­G: Reese Witherspoo­n as Carrie with Mamere (Arnold Oceng), Paul (Emmanuel Jal) and Jeremiah (Ger Duany).
CONFRONTIN­G: Reese Witherspoo­n as Carrie with Mamere (Arnold Oceng), Paul (Emmanuel Jal) and Jeremiah (Ger Duany).
 ??  ?? QUEUE OF DESPAIR: The Good Lie zooms in on the plight of Sudan’s ‘Lost Boys’ during the 2000s.
QUEUE OF DESPAIR: The Good Lie zooms in on the plight of Sudan’s ‘Lost Boys’ during the 2000s.
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