Iranian film shows reality of Afghan children’s lives ■ Mohsen Makhmalbafs ‘Kandahar’ portrays a side of Afghanistan overlooked on many news broadcasts ‘Kandahar’ Mohsen Makhmalbaf By Ryan Bornheimer for the Emerald Despite winning multiple awards at film festivals throughout the world last summer, Iranian filmmaker Mohsen MaMimalbaf’s “Kandahar” struggled to find distri bution in the United States. Then came Sept. 11 and the subsequent war in Afghanistan. Suddenly, this movie named after a Taliban-held Afghan city was very marketable. “Kandahar” opens with a bird’s eye view of the forbidding moun tains of Afghanistan. By now, these landscapes have become common images in American homes. And there can be no doubt that watching Makhalbaf’s movie, in light of what’s happened in this former Tal iban stronghold, gives “Kandahar” added weight. But what the movie offers that no CNN broadcast can is the presentation of these beautiful vistas as stark contradiction to the brutality and oppression that’s be come the daily existence of the peo ple who live there. The plot is simple. Nafas, an Afghan woman who fled to Canada as a teenager, is returning to her homeland. Her sister, maimed by a land mine and overwhelmed by the mistreatment of women, has sent her a letter in which she vows to commit suicide at the time of the next solar eclipse, only three days away. Disguised in the head-to-toe covering of the burka, Nafas enlists the help of various locals to reach Kandahar in time to save her dis turbed sibling. Though “Kandahar” has a straightforward plot and beautiful Courtesy Photo photography, it has a documentary style vitality, thanks to a run-and gun structure. Nafas is on a timetable, and since we’re tagging along, the pace is non-stop. The actors in the film are not ac tors at all, but Afghan refugees from camps near the Iranian border. Their natural behavior imbues the movie with a tactile — and at times, heartbreaking — realism. Likewise, Nelofer Pazira, who portrays Nafas, is in fact a Canadi an journalist and becomes the movie’s makeshift travel guide. At times, “Kandahar" feels like a per verse episode of “Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood.” Only we’re not be ing taken on a tour of the Crayola Crayon Factory, but a depressing wasteland ravaged by decades of war. This style has a purpose. The way the Afghans in the movie have come to take war and death for granted offers a sobering glimpse into a world so foreign to Western sensibilities, some may not have believed it prior to Sept. 11. One especially surreal sequence focuses on a Red Cross camp that offers prosthetic limbs to an end less parade of men who’ve suffered the same fate as Nafas’ sister. The way the scene unfolds, one would think journeying to this “market” for limbs is as natural as a visit to the pharmacy to fill a prescription. At one point, planes buzz the area, dropping more prosthetics by para chutes. Men on crutches race to pick up the goods in a slow-motion sequence that illustrates the sad ab surdity of such an act. “Kandahar” gives special atten tion to the children raised in this environment — young women in particular. When Nafas arrives in a border town, Afghan girls are being told they will no longer be allowed to go to school. Later in the day, they are taught lessons in the dan gers of picking up dolls that may be rigged with explosives. Later, we see students at a school for boys, who chant the Koran and are given pop quizzes on the useful ness of swords and machine guns in the war against “infidels.” These are the moments that de fine “Kandahar,” and they are not easily forgotten. The movie is at times disturbing, but never ugly. It’s eye-opening but remains lyrical and possesses an exotic beauty that may surprise you. You can’t look away, and despite the subject mat ter, you won’t want to. The movie itself provides hope that cinema can still be a vital tool to reflect the world we all live in. Ryan Bornheimer is a freelance reporter for the Emerald. A&E brief Siobhan to perform ‘pumped up punk rock power pop’ “The Price is Right” host Bob Barker encourages viewers to spay and neuter their pets. So does Siob han. Former Blondie-infatuated riot grrrl Siobhan DuVall is playing Sunday at John Henry’s. DuVall’s rock life began in Van couver, British Columbia, in 1989 when, after heing influenced by. Blondie, the Ramones and Califor nia hardcore, she formed an all girl band, the Bombshells. The Bombshells opened for the ’90s legends Nirvana, Sublime and the Goo Goo Dolls. Now touring under her own name, DuVall is sponsored by Mission Snowboards and has ap peared at the Telus World Ski and Snowboard Festival. DuVall has just released her first full-length album, .“Star.”, The album, pro duced by Vince Jones and pow ered by Pat Steward and Doug El liott (formerly of the Odds), fea tures what DuVall calls “pumped up punk rock power pop.” Music from her new album will be used in a Whistler-produced ex treme sports video. Now DuVall is coming to Eugene to play her own special brand of girlie rock. Call John Henry’s for more information at 342-3358. — Alix Kerl UO Ticket Office EMU: 346-4363 Hu It Center- 682-5000 UT Box Office: 346-4191 (Pays of IVrtorijiivs only) ni.vyfsitv of Ortvon Comic News 492 E 13th 686-2458 For the week of Friday, April 19th!! Receive our weekly WebPage Update!* Movie reviews, scheduling & contests. r www.bijou-cinemas.com ^ A Fenny, Smart, Frwli Look at Sax aid tfce Si«§ia Girl. "A smashing romantic comedy™ It’s a winner!”-McrTnMn,MIUlMSTMI tetog jSSico Stein 5:15, 7:15, & 9:15 Nighdy „ r Sat & Sun Mat 3:15pm_E INTERNATIONALLY ACCLAIMED DIRECTOR MOHSEN * MAKHMAL8AF S EPIC TALE OF HOPE AND COURAGE KANDAHAR -JOURNEY INTO THE HEART OF AFGANSTAN “Best Film of the YearT-Richard Cortes, TIME MAGAZINE 5:05 & 6:55 Nightly Sat Mat 3:05pm FINAL WEEKI * “Cinematic home cooking at its most savory.” —^JayCaiT, BOSTON GLOBE Mensaen Wedding SUNDAY NIGHT ONLYil ££ Playwright, author, radio star, and retired elf David Sedaris may be the most brilliantly witty New Yorker since Dorothy Parker. WEEKLV HUIT CENTER Purchase tickets at (541) 682-5000, visit the Hult Center ami EMU Box Office, or online at hiitcenter.org or tickets.com. Discounts for 20 or more coll Susan at 744-1962. r V v, l i ik This 200a