Wah-Wah | Telescope Film
Wah-Wah

Wah-Wah

Critic Rating

(read reviews)

User Rating

  • United Kingdom,
  • France,
  • South Africa
  • 2005
  • · 120m

Director Richard E. Grant
Cast Nicholas Hoult, Gabriel Byrne, Emily Watson, Julie Walters, Miranda Richardson, Celia Imrie
Genre Drama

Ralph Compton, a young boy in Swaziland, witnesses the disintegration of his dysfunctional family as Britain's rule in South Africa comes to an end. When his father remarries an American, Ralph finds that she is the only one who can truly understand his inner turmoil.

Stream Wah-Wah

What are critics saying?

80

Los Angeles Times by Kevin Crust

Both acidly funny and very moving.

80

Empire by David Hughes

An unforced, engaging and surprisingly incisive account of the disintegration of British rule in Africa.

75

Christian Science Monitor by Peter Rainer

Grant is a fine actor ("Withnail and I," "Gosford Park") and, although he doesn't appear in Wah-Wah, his spiritedness as a performer carries through to some of the others in his cast.

75

New York Daily News by Jami Bernard

Thanks to Grant's script and direction, the exotic Swaziland location (a film first) and an engaging cast, this smartly crafted drama radiates a gently comic pulse.

75

The A.V. Club by Nathan Rabin

Wah-Wah can't sustain the mastery of its superior first hour, but it maintains a core of truth that sets it apart from less-convincing depictions of boys becoming men.

75

Philadelphia Inquirer by Carrie Rickey

The fascinating aspect of the rambling and involving film is how Ralph and this no-nonsense dame who married Dad become confederates.

75

Seattle Post-Intelligencer by Paula Nechak

The film is so well acted -- by Byrne, who makes Harry's internalized agonies and continuously carried torch for his ex-wife touching, and by Watson and Hoult -- that its more cloying moments, including a staged version of the musical "Camelot" (which is too long), are a moot point.

75

Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert

Wah-Wah has a sequence, based on old newsreels, in which the flag is lowered and the sun sets on another bit of the empire. Odd how many critics have felt the whole movie should be about this. I don't see why. The story is about people who lived closed lives, and a film about them would necessarily give independence only a supporting role.

70

The New York Times

Yet for all its studied snobbery and brittle entitlement, the film is never mean-spirited: even Ralph's monstrous parents are treated with more compassion than they deserve. Clearly, Mr. Grant's memories are more fond than bitter - even if the same probably can't be said of the Swazis.

70

Washington Post by Desson Thomson

Grant's unblinking but sympathetic depiction of this emotionally unhinged world makes the viewer feel like an illicit, enlightened gawker, and it has the enormous fringe benefit of fine performers, including Richardson, who puts endearing vigor into the adulterous Lauren, and Julie Walters, Ralph's aunt, who tells the boy her frequent tipsiness is a recurring case of "sunstroke."

70

Variety by Derek Elley

Flavorsome performances by a seasoned cast, held in check by Grant's traditional but well-crafted, always cinematic direction.

70

The Hollywood Reporter by Kirk Honeycutt

Veteran actor Richard E. Grant makes his writing and directing debut with Wah-Wah, a startling portrait of his own startling and unusual childhood, growing up in Swaziland in the waning days of the British Empire in Africa.

60

L.A. Weekly by Ella Taylor

Though far from expert filmmaking - visual clichés fly thick and fast - the movie has a swooning feel for the stark beauty of the African kingdom in which it was shot.

58

Entertainment Weekly by Lisa Schwarzbaum

An overdeveloped coming-of-age potboiler.

50

Village Voice

That the film is semi- autobiographical for caustic actor-turned-writer-director Richard E. Grant helps explain its severely, sometimes laughably bitter tone.

50

ReelViews by James Berardinelli

As coming of age stories go, Wah-Wah does little to distinguish itself.