Bobi Wine: The People's President | Telescope Film
Bobi Wine: The People's President

Bobi Wine: The People's President (Bobi Wine: Ghetto President)

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  • United Kingdom,
  • Uganda,
  • United States
  • 2022
  • · 121m

Directors Christopher Sharp, Moses Bwayo
Cast Bobi Wine
Genre Documentary

Centering around Ugandan opposition leader, activist, and musician Bobi Wine, this powerful documentary follows the fight to end Yoweri Museveni’s 35-year-long dictatorship. As they face death threats and brutal backlash, Wine uses his music to empower the people through their struggle.

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What are critics saying?

83

The Playlist by Nick Allen

This is a profile of unfathomable courage that deserves to be seen, in part to honor those who supported the film’s supply of footage and cannot be listed in the credits for fear of repercussion. It is a testament to not giving up and the strength of a people united—not just by a song, but by a deep belief in a just future.

80

Screen Daily by Allan Hunter

Bobi Wine is an intimate portrait of a hugely engaging figure that also serves as a sobering warning about the seeming impossibility of democratic change in a dictatorship.

80

The Observer (UK) by Wendy Ide

It’s a gripping piece of film-making: a propulsive, kinetic account of a grassroots campaign captured at what would seem to be considerable personal risk to both the subject and directors. And as a snapshot of a curdled, corrupted political system, it is eye-opening and at times genuinely terrifying.

80

The Guardian by Cath Clarke

It’s an intimate portrait combined with increasingly shocking footage as his opposition movement comes under attack.

75

Observer by Laura Babiak

The footage is daring, dangerous filmmaking, and though it shows some of humanity’s lowest impulses, Bobi’s ultimate message of optimism for Uganda’s future shines through.

75

Washington Post by Mark Jenkins

The documentary’s resulting mix of intimate portrait and raw street warfare proves visceral, dynamic and sometimes upsetting — although Sharp and Bwayo say they excluded the most horrific footage.

75

San Francisco Chronicle by G. Allen Johnson

Aside from its scintillating title character, Bobi Wine: The People’s President is valuable because it stands as a clarion call against authoritarianism.

75

RogerEbert.com by Brandon David Wilson

It will only take a few seconds on Google to tell you how this election ends, but what only the film can do is show you how Bobi Wine evolves into a powerful spokesman for democratic values as he tries to save Uganda from autocracy.

70

The Hollywood Reporter by Daniel Fienberg

I had quibbles about the consistency of the documentary’s narrative approach — but not its bracing message about the challenges of political idealism and the wide-ranging consequences of democracy in peril.

70

Los Angeles Times by Michael Ordona

Its narrative flaws (and there are serious ones) are more or less overcome by its compelling protagonist and the loving marital relationship at its center.