The Very Best
8.1
8.1
Henry B.J. Phiri’s performance as the corrupt government official Mr. Banda — who sings, “Get my gown, there’s a new witch in town” — is genuinely Oscar-worthy.
Remarkably for a movie about women being shunned and exploited by those more powerful than them, I Am Not A Witch is often wryly funny. That’s because this satire about Zambia’s labor camps for "witches" is told with a matter-of-fact-ness that brings out both the heartbreak and absurdity of the film’s events. The bitter gravity of the predicament nine-year-old Shula (Maggie Mulubwa) finds herself in — she’s been accused of witchcraft on the back of some very flimsy evidence — is never glossed over, but neither is its farcicality. Appropriately for its subject, there are also touches of magical realism here, notes that elevate the film into something even more complex than a wry commentary on this morbidly fascinating form of misogyny. This hybrid tonal approach is executed with the kind of fluidity filmmakers might hope to one day master late on in their career — which makes the fact that this is director Rungano Nyoni’s debut all the more extraordinary.
Though she barely says a word, Mulubwa is phenomenally engaging as Shula, her reticence initially appearing as the natural timidity of a child before morphing into stony defiance and then taking on stranger qualities. It’s a performance that matches the seamless metamorphosis of the filmmaking, and is made all the more remarkable by the fact that it was non-professional actor Mulubwa’s first-ever role.
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