The Kite Runner Movie Review
The Kite Runner Review

"The Kite Runner" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2007
Cast and Crew
Director : Marc ForsterProducer : William Horberg,Walter F. Parkes,Rebecca Yeldham,E. Bennett Walsh
Screenwiter : David Benioff
Starring : Khalid Abdalla,Homayoun Ershadi,Zekiria Ebrahimi,Ahmad Khan Mahmoodzada,Shaun Toub,Nabi Tanha,Ali Danesh Bakhtyari,Said Taghmaoui
Practically no other nation's modern history has been so rife with grief and
shattered expectations as that of Afghanistan; a fact utilized to maximum
effect by Marc Foster in his adaptation of Khaled Hosseini's book club
blockbuster The Kite Runner. Starting in the relatively chaos-free years before
the Soviet invasion and concluding in the middle of the Taliban's theocratic
lockdown, the film manages the difficult task of tracking massive historical
upheavals while keeping tightly focused on the people forced to live through
such tumultuous changes.
The character who ties the whole narrative together is Amir, a spoiled brat of
a kid who turns into a spoiled writer as an adult only to grudgingly submit
himself to the rigors of becoming a hero near the conclusion. In the mid-1970s,
the young Amir (Zekiria Ebrahimi) lives with his prosperous father, or Baba, in
a nice house in Kabul. Amir lives a pretty decent and sheltered life, his best
friend, the fiercely loyal Hassan (played with emphatic nobility by Ahmad Khan
Mahmoodzada), is the son of the family's head servant, and will do practically
anything Amir wants. His Baba is a proudly educated and modern man, with his
jazz records, turtlenecks, bottles of liquor, and well-kept Mustang; the last
particularly beloved by the Steve McQueen-worshipping boys. Amir and Hassan are
an excellent team when it comes to the fascinating Afghan take on kite-flying,
where pairs of boys get into high-altitude duels, trying to cut the strings of
their opponents kites (the sport was later banned when the Taliban came to
power).
The trouble in paradise comes in the form of one of those petty tragedies of
which such novels are made: after watching Hassan get brutalized in an alleyway
by some teen punks, Amir (already jealous of how much respect Baba gives
Hassan, and perversely mistrustful of Hassan's egoless love) not only does
nothing to stop it, but gets Hassan's family discharged after falsely accusing
him of stealing. Not long after, the Soviets invade, and Amir and his father
decamp for California, leaving their house in the possession of family friend
Rahim Khan (Shaun Toab).
At this point of the story, Amir is a powerfully despicable coward of a
character, and though his edges soften later through a maturity of a sort, the
stains left by his childhood behavior are never quite eradicated. Filling the
gap for the audience in the meantime is Baba, personified in a stupendous
performance by Homayoun Ershadi (Taste of Cherry), who plays the father as a
mensch's mensch, the kind of guy who literally places himself, unarmed and
without a thought, between a Kalashnikov-wielding Russian soldier and a woman
the soldier is intent on raping. Next to this elegantly moralistic figure, Amir
can't help but shrink. Years later in California, a college graduate yearning
to become a writer, Amir (played as an adult by Khalid Abdalla) still seems the
palest shadow, all his life's energy sucked away by the guilt of what he did
and what he allowed to happen in the past. Even when he's offered the chance to
redeem himself by returning to the homeland -- the voice on the phone says,
memorably, "There is a way to be good again" -- Amir is never able to become
the hero that this film, stocked full as it is with villains of the worst
stripe, so needs.
At his best, Forster can be a director of powerfully revelatory emotions, even
in roughly constructed works like Monster's Ball. In The Kite Runner, those
gifts are put to good use as Forster guides his fantastic cast (who have been
little seen in Hollywood, except for Toab and Abdalla's brief roles in Crash
and United 93, respectively) through some heavily emotional territory. But
Hosseini's story is one that relies heavily on gimmicky turns in the action
leading toward teary crescendos of the sort which Forster indulged in to excess
in Finding Neverland. Now, it must be said that these kind of tear-stained
climaxes are much more earned here than in that previous bauble of a film,
given the weighty historical panorama backgrounding everything. But for the
evocative performances and the stunningly captured and severe beauty of the
landscape (western China standing in for Afghanistan), by the end one feels
tired and more than a little manipulated, like one of those kites malevolently
jerking through the thin, cold air over Kabul.
This kite will never run again.
Reviewer: Chris Barsanti



