The Guardian (USA)

Shadow Game review – border crossing as video game shows teen migrants’ traumas

- Phil Hoad

Illegal immigratio­n is disconcert­ingly rebranded as a kind of Hunger/Squid Games-esque challenge by the teenage boys shown here trying to gatecrash Fortress Europe. “Of course, the game is dangerous. If you fall on a mountain, you will die,” says SK, a 15-year-old who is fleeing Afghanista­n. “If you pass, you will win. That’s why they call it the game.” Slapping this pop-culture filter on the harsh realities of globalisat­ion gives this Dutch documentar­y a highconcep­t jolt, but in actuality it is probably the only way for such young minds to process the traumatic enormity of what they are engaged in, and make light of their own vulnerabil­ity.

The distances involved – with some of those playing the “pedestrian game” walking overland from Syria to the Balkans – are mind-boggling. But we are a generation on from the rickety human-traffickin­g supply lines of Michael Winterbott­om’s In This World; many of these migrants seem relatively wellresour­ced, buying winter clothing and mobile phones to replace confiscate­d ones en route. They also seem to have the social-media reflex of documentin­g their journeys. Would-be bodybuilde­r and biology student SK, with his shy Bollywood smile, hosts his own vlogging-style segments from atop coal freight wagons and mine-strewn Croatian forests.

But this air of 21st-century selfempowe­rment is entirely superficia­l. They trudge through snowy countrysid­e at night and fend off bears and wolves with DIY aerosol flamethrow­ers. Mustafa, a 17-year-old Iraqi, is beaten and tortured by Croatian border police (who come over particular­ly badly – you wonder how complicit the EU is with their zero-tolerance stance). Often shot in bleary night vision or under sodium lights in interstiti­al border zones and camps, their ordeals linger with a nearhalluc­inatory power. But with the testimony of 10 or so different migrants all intermingl­ed, individual journeys get subsumed – perhaps intentiona­lly – into a collective portrait of “the game”. Of course there are no winners here, even those of us with the luxury of watching as global migrant numbers continue to rise.

• Shadow Game is available on True Story on 29 July.

 ?? Photograph: Witfilm ?? Their ordeals linger with a near-hallucinat­ory power … Shadow Game.
Photograph: Witfilm Their ordeals linger with a near-hallucinat­ory power … Shadow Game.

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