Your Company
 

Afghan Star

✭ ✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

United Kingdom · 2009
1h 27m
Director Havana Marking
Starring Habib Amiri, Setara Hussainzada, Rafi Naabzada, Lima Sahar
Genre Documentary, Music

This documentary exhibits the effects that the talent competition "Afghan Star" has on the incredibly diverse inhabitants of Afghanistan and affords a glimpse into lives rarely seen on film. Contestants risk their lives to appear on the enormously popular television show, in search of uncertain fame.

Stream Afghan Star

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

70

Village Voice by

Marking follows the finalists around on the last leg of their PR campaigns and captures something sweetly goofy, with an edge of creepy, about their aping of smarmy American self-promotion (kissing babies, etc).

80

Washington Post by Ann Hornaday

Afghan Star goes much deeper, eloquently conveying the tensions, small victories and shattering setbacks of a fragile democracy struggling to regain a once-flourishing culture.

70

Variety by Dennis Harvey

Not the slickest or most crowd-pleasing among many recent performance-competition docus, it's nonetheless absorbing for the light it casts on those many Afghanis who want an end to guns and fanaticism, and the return of a social liberalism.

60

New York Daily News by Joe Neumaier

Fascinating and, when you see Afghan versions of Simon Cowell and Co. reacting to tryouts, a reminder of how fame and the thirst for it is the same in any language.

83

The A.V. Club by Noel Murray

If nothing else, Afghan Star offers a reminder of how much has changed in Afghanistan from the late ’70s--when Kabul was a secular-oriented city with co-ed universities and a thriving nightclub scene--to the rise of the Taliban.

75

Miami Herald by Rene Rodriguez

Focusing on the contestants who make the initial cut -- two men and two women -- the film can't resist wringing some American Idol-style suspense from speculation about who the eventual victor will be. But the movie also leaves no doubt as to who the real winners are.

80

The New York Times by Stephen Holden

The movie uses the talent show Afghan Star as a prism through which to examine the fragmented tribal culture of Afghanistan as reflected in the backgrounds of four finalists (two of them women) and the public responses to their performances.

75

New York Post by V.A. Musetto

The show works pretty much the same as "Idol" does, with Afghans voting by cellphone for their favorite performers. But this is Afghanistan, where the Taliban still has power, not America.

Users who liked this film also liked