Your Company
 

For Sama

✭ ✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

United Kingdom, Syria, United States · 2019
1h 40m
Director Edward Watts
Starring Sama Al-Khateab, Hamza Al-Khateab, Waad al-Kateab
Genre Documentary

Waad Al-Kateab is a documentary filmmaker who became a citizen journalist in 2011, after protests broke out across Syria against the Assad regime. In this film, she captures the brutal bombing of Aleppo, as she and her doctor husband, braving the destruction of the city's last standing hospital, lived it.

Stream For Sama

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

100

CineVue by

For Sama is a clarion call to the ignorant West and a testament to the sustaining power of unconditional love in the face of absolute horror. It is terrible to witness and absolutely essential viewing for all.

100

Variety by Guy Lodge

Simple in concept and shattering in execution, blending hard-headed reportage with unguarded personal testimony, it’s you-are-there cinema of the most literal order.

91

The Film Stage by John Fink

The latest in a series of work about the cost of the refugee crisis and human migration, For Sama is a harrowing experience and certainly one of the most essential films of the year.

80

Screen Daily by Jonathan Romney

Following the siege month by month through 2016, the film has a gripping narrative drive, with many sequences that work to variously harrowing and cathartic effect.

80

The Hollywood Reporter by Jordan Mintzer

Revisiting some of the events that marked Aleppo’s final year under siege, as well as those that led up to them, the film offers up a rare firsthand account of war from a strictly female perspective, focusing on how conflict affects families, and, especially, the hundreds of innocent victims that are children.

90

The New York Times by Teo Bugbee

The activists of this film, including al-Kateab herself, don’t speak in the language of philosophers or politicians. Their quotidian aspirations — to build a garden, to send their children safely to school — demonstrate the brutality of the government’s response, but they also invite viewers to picture themselves in the shoes of these modest political dissidents.

100

RogerEbert.com by Tomris Laffly

A devastating scrapbook and a confessional journal of sorts. It’s also a personal cinematic endeavor as opposed to a historical crash course in the vein of “Cries From Syria,” another superb documentary on the subject, but one with different ambitions.

Users who liked this film also liked