Jirga | Telescope Film
Jirga

Jirga

Critic Rating

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Feeling immense guilt over mistakenly killing a civilian man while serving in Afghanistan, a former Australian soldier decides to find the man’s family and ask for forgiveness – or receive just punishment. A moving film about facing one’s demons, it was shot under extremely dangerous conditions in the Taliban-controlled region of Kandahar Province.

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What are critics saying?

80

Los Angeles Times by Carlos Aguilar

A remarkable truthfulness shepherds Benjamin Gilmour’s tightly written and conscientiously produced drama Jirga as it renders an image of Afghanistan not as a ravaged battleground but as an arrestingly rich land.

80

The Guardian by Luke Buckmaster

This very fine film has a way of pulling you towards its wavelength.

70

Film Threat

Jirga is not going for subtlety. Its heavy-handed message about guilt, responsibility, and forgiveness is outright stated to the audience. It’s very idealistic, and you might not buy it. But you will remember the experience of having your eyes opened to a new part of the world.

70

Film Threat by Adam Keller

Jirga is not going for subtlety. Its heavy-handed message about guilt, responsibility, and forgiveness is outright stated to the audience. It’s very idealistic, and you might not buy it. But you will remember the experience of having your eyes opened to a new part of the world.

60

The New York Times by Glenn Kenny

Despite the performance’s credibility, few things are more irritating, artistically and historically, than the stranger-in-a-strange-land interloper who hasn’t got a clue what he’s doing.

50

Variety by Eddie Cockrell

As interesting as all this is, and as challenging and perilous it must have been to capture these images, Jirga’s elliptical approach to plot and selective use of subtitles does the finished product no favors.

50

The Hollywood Reporter by Harry Windsor

Skirting the line between documentary and fiction in a manner reminiscent of the Jalalabad-based Aussie filmmaker George Gittoes (thanked in the credits), the filmmaking could most charitably be described as artless, with a medley of shaky thousand-pixel close-ups providing a sense of detail that doesn't quite extend to the script.