‘Malala’ a telling picture of Taliban shooting victim
Poised, articulate and indisputably brave, Malala
Yousafzai is a fascinating, inspiring figure.
She was shot in the head and gravely wounded by a Taliban
assassin in her native Pakistan in 2012 when she was 15 years old. She not only
survived but thrived, becoming a world renowned icon of courage and commitment
to the cause of education for girls around the world.
“He Named Me Malala,” filmmaker Davis Guggenheim’s
well-crafted and deeply affecting documentary about the young woman (she is now
18) digs below the iconography and the honors — her sharing the Nobel Peace
Prize in 2014, her meetings with world leaders, including President Obama — and
offers an illuminating portrait of the human being behind the image.
In sections filmed at her family’s home in exile in
Birmingham, England, she comes across as a typical teen, squabbling with her
brothers around the kitchen table — “she is a little bit naughty,” her younger
brother says — doing her homework and surfing the Web.
Above all, she is revealed to be the devoted daughter of
her father, Ziauddin Yousafzai, the “he” of the title, who named her Malala after
a Pashtun heroine revered as the Joan of Arc of Afghanistan, who was killed in
battle in the 19th century while rallying Afghan soldiers against the British.
“We are one soul in two different bodies,” Ziauddin says,
with Malala’s activism having been inspired by his own. He founded a chain of
schools in Pakistan, spoke out publicly against the Taliban’s repressive and
violent campaign against the education of girls, and instilled in his daughter
a deep and lasting love of learning.
Using family photos and painterly animation to depict her
childhood years in Pakistan’s lush Swat Valley, Guggenheim provides context and
background for the journey Malala has found herself on.
In conversation, showing little evidence of the wounds
she suffered, which have largely healed, Malala speaks with clarity and
authority of her commitment to the cause of education, and of her fearlessness
born out of the trauma of the shooting.
Truly a remarkable person.
http://www.theolympian.com/entertainment/movies-news-reviews/article38265087.html
10words
1. indisputably 無可爭議
2. assassin 刺客
3. illuminating 照亮
4. squabbling 爭吵
5. rallying 拉力賽
6. repressive 鎮壓
7. depict 描繪
8. healed 癒合
9.fearlessness 無畏
10. trauma 創傷
WHEN-2012
WHERE-Pakistan
WHAT-shooting victim
WHO-Malala Yousafzai
WHY-education for girl
HOW-cause of education
WHEN-2012
WHERE-Pakistan
WHAT-shooting victim
WHO-Malala Yousafzai
WHY-education for girl
http://www.theolympian.com/entertainment/movies-news-reviews/article38265087.html
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回覆刪除I think that Malala is the bravest girl in the world. She does not afraid of Taliban's violence. Instead, she strives for education of girls. She really devotes much to Myanmar. We need more such a person voicing for civics. The society will be better.
回覆刪除Malala is a brave girl. She's so brave to stand out to speak of the right of women should be educated. Unfortunately, she was shot in the head, but it didn't make her give up her opinion, instead, she became braver. I respect her behavior
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