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This Is Not a Burial, It’s a Resurrection

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Lesotho · 2019
2h 0m
Director Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese
Starring Mary Twala, Makhaola Ndebele, Jerry Mofokeng, Tseko Monaheng
Genre Drama

The film follows Mantoa, an 80-year-old widow. Her husband long dead, she is preparing to pass as well, arranging her own funeral and wrapping up her worldly affairs. However, her homeland is threatened with forced resettlement due to reservoir construction, and Mantoa decides she still has some fight left in her before she goes.

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What are critics saying?

90

Screen Daily by Allan Hunter

This Is Not A Burial, It’s A Resurrection offers a vivid, beautifully crafted reflection on identity, community and the tension between respecting age-old traditions and accepting the seemingly unstoppable march of progress.

94

Paste Magazine by Andrew Crump

Yes, This Is Not a Burial, It’s a Resurrection is constitutionally sad. It’s also angry, restrained, abandoned, exuberant when cracks open between its downward facing emotions, and, above all else, impeccably constructed.

100

RogerEbert.com by Carlos Aguilar

This Is Not a Burial, It’s a Resurrection is a searing epitaph for Mary Twala, a veteran performer at the peak of her absorbing presence. And it is a radical international breakthrough for Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese, a filmmaker who uses potential philosophical expressions to ask tough questions about the ravaged history of Africa.

90

Variety by Guy Lodge

A haunted, unsentimental paean to land and its physical containment of community and ancestry — all endangered by nominally progressive infrastructure — this arresting third feature from Lesotho-born writer-director Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese is as classical in theme as it is adventurous in presentation.

89

Austin Chronicle by Jenny Nulf

This Is Not a Burial, it’s a Resurrection is arthouse cinema at its best, a lyrical eulogy from a confident auteur whose poetic touch is meticulous and grand.

75

The A.V. Club by Lawrence Garcia

There are longueurs where Mosese’s approach shows its limits, as the film’s rhythms go from stately to stultifying. More often, though, Mosese manages to fuse his film’s stylistic tensions with Mantoa’s struggles of expression, her efforts to carry on in both word and deed.

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