Log In


Film Reviews

Miral

Miral

  • Rating: Miral rated 3
  • Director: Julian Schnabel
  • Starring: Hiam Abbass
  • Details: France/Italy / 112mins (15A).

With The Diving Bell and The Butterfly, director Julian Schnabel's last outing, fascinating and depressing us all in equal measure, there were high hopes for his next film. Miral might not live up to those hopes but it will tug at the heartstrings and its message is a solid and timely one.
Based on a true story, we first meet the titular character Miral (Pinto) as she is sent by her father to a Jerusalem orphanage, founded by the kind-hearted Hind (Abbass), at the age of seven. Growing up in the safe confines of the institute, Miral has no idea of the worldly troubles going on outside the walls until, aged seventeen, she is given a job teaching at a refugee camp. Suddenly enraptured by the horrors of war and her love of PLO leader Hani (Omar Metwally, who will play Amun in the upcoming Breaking Dawn), Miral is torn between this new life and her mentor's teachings that education and understanding is the only path to peace.
There is a lengthy back-story to this film: Miral opens in 1947 where we are introduced to Hind (Abbass), a wealthy woman who opens her doors to fifty-five homeless children; she is helped by kind soldier (Dafoe) and the orphanage's numbers rise to the hundreds. The story is then taken over by Nadia (Yasmine Al Massri), a teenager who, after being raped by her father, runs away from home into the arms of Islamic leader Jamal (Alexander Siddig). Nadia struggles to put her past behind her and falls into alcoholism, leaving Jamal with daughter Miral.
Making a film that spans twenty-five years and encompasses many viewpoints, Miral was always going to be a tricky venture. After the intimate story of The Diving Bell And The Butterfly, which was shot entirely from inside a man's mind, it's easy to see why Schnabel wanted to break out to tackle a wide range of characters. But in doing so, he fails to nail down any specific character in detail and Miral wanders over the years looking for something other than its message – tolerance – to sink its teeth into and comes up short.

Review by Gavin Burke

Your Comments

No Comments have been posted for this article yet - be the first

Write Your Own Comment!

Search

Or search alphabetically:

1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 0 | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H | I | J | K | L | M | N | O | P | Q | R | S | T | U | V | W | X | Y | Z

DVD Reviews

More DVD

The Descendants
FILM TITLE rated 4

 When a film, especially a low key drama, is hyped up then there can be a certain level of disappointment in some quarters. Thankfully, Alexander Payne's first feature since the superb... [more]

The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo (2011)
FILM TITLE rated 4

 Full disclosure: I have never read the books that this American-financed remake is based upon, nor have I seen the hugely successful Swedish productions that followed it. A classy production... [more]

Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol
FILM TITLE rated 3

Pixar stalwart Brad Bird makes his live-action feature debut with a franchise that has just had its most underrated installment. JJ Abrams' first film is almost vintage Cameron, and was a much... [more]

Shame
FILM TITLE rated 4

 An unrelenting examination of a fascinating but bleak character, Shame is a dramatical, dense and remarkable film that will astound and disturb in equal measure. While Steve McQueen's sombre... [more]

Your Cinema Listings

Competitions

No competitons currently running