Los Angeles Times

A fierce portrait of femininity

- —Katie Walsh calendar@latimes.com

France’s Academy Award submission is a film about Turkey, but “Mustang” is so singularly excellent and original that there’s no question why France would claim it.

The feature debut of French-Turkish director and co-writer Deniz Gamze Ergüven, “Mustang” refers to the untamed spirits of its five protagonis­ts, teenage sisters living under the fretful, watchful eyes of their grandmothe­r and uncle in a small town.

After a last-day-of-school romp, the adults suspect trouble with the headstrong girl gang and clamp down on their freedom, locking them up at home.

Grandma teaches them wifely duties, and she soon arranges marriages for the teens, if only to absolve herself of responsibi­lity for them. This is seen through the eyes of the youngest and most defiant sister, Lale (Günes Sensoy).

As she watches her carefree, wild sisters forced into marriage, she plans her own escape.

Ergüven uses the camera as a sixth sister, following the herd of girls as they strain against the restrictio­ns of a home that’s become a prison. The five girls are placed together in the same frame, their floppy, coltish limbs and manes of hair piled together and indistingu­ishable from one another, a unified entity.

“Mustang” beautifull­y expresses the girls’ unbridled energy, a force that refuses to be locked up, controlled or repressed. It’s a moving portrait of sisterhood, a celebratio­n of a fierce femininity and a damning indictment of patriarcha­l systems that seek to destroy and control this spirit.

‘Mustang.’ Rated PG-13 for mature thematic material, sexual content and a rude gesture. Running time: 1 hour, 37 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Royal.

 ?? Cohen Media Group ?? “MUSTANG,” France’s Oscar entry, is a moving portrait of five Turkish sisters with untamed spirits.
Cohen Media Group “MUSTANG,” France’s Oscar entry, is a moving portrait of five Turkish sisters with untamed spirits.

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