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Nowhere to Hide

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Norway, Sweden, Finland · 2016
1h 26m
Director Zaradasht Ahmed
Starring Nori Sharif, Abu Fallah, Hans Husum
Genre Documentary

This documentary details the harrowing story of medic and father Nori Sharif through five years of dramatic change after the American retreat from Iraq in 2011. While filming and interviewing survivors, he finds himself trapped between ISIS and the different Iraqi Militias, trying to escape and save his own family.

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What are critics saying?

100

Washington Post by Ann Hornaday

A shattering vérité portrait of the disintegration of Iraqi society in the period immediately following the withdrawal of U.S. troops from that country, this urgent, of-the-moment film doesn’t explain the ensuing chaos as much as plunge viewers into it firsthand, offering a terrifying, ultimately moving portrait of the effects of war, both physical and psychic.

80

Village Voice by Craig D. Lindsey

Both Sharif and Ahmed make sure audiences leave Nowhere to Hide well aware that Iraq remains a war zone — one where innocent people remain caught in the crossfire.

80

New York Magazine (Vulture) by David Edelstein

Probably that’s the most hopeful thing in the film — that and the spare and very beautiful guitar soundtrack by Gaute Barlindhaug and Ciwan Haco. No one can make sense of what is happening to this and other families. But they must film it.

80

Screen International by Fionnuala Halligan

Those who can’t understand the tangled battle zones or tragic recent history of Iraq may take some comfort from Nowhere To Hide’s revelation that ordinary citizens of that country don’t understand any of it either.

80

Los Angeles Times by Michael Rechtshaffen

As captured through the ceaselessly unflinching lens of Sharif’s borrowed video camera, Nowhere to Hide offers an uneasy prognosis that is at once graphically gut-wrenching and doggedly life-affirming.

70

The Hollywood Reporter by Neil Young

The genial, relentlessly curious Sharif proves an excellent guide as the security situation spirals from instability into nightmare and the so-called Islamic State (aka ISIS or Daesh) advances inexorably advances towards Jalawla.

75

Boston Globe by Peter Keough

Sharif is a paragon of decency and endurance, but his camera skills are limited and often constrained by circumstances. For the most part this roughness reflects the raw immediacy of the experience.

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