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Monday 21 July 2014

The Kite Runner - film review

 The Kite Runner Review – 4.5/5


Amazing. Terrific. Electrifying. Words do not suffice in expressing how I found this adaptation of Afghan American author, Khaled Hosseini’s novel by the same name.

The Kite Runner tells the tale of Amir – a young Afghan boy growing up in Afghanistan amidst tumultuous political events – the 1979 Russian invasion of Afghanistan, the mass exodus of Afghan citizens to places of refuge, namely Pakistan and the United States of America, and the genesis of the Taliban regime.

The story opens up to decades later- when Amir, having fled from Afghanistan with his father, following the 1979 Russian invasion, on the eve of a book tour of his novel, receives a phone call from a family friend, who asks him to return to his homeland in Afghanistan to help out the son of his childhood friend. 

The film is told in a series of flashbacks, tracing his childhood in Pakistan and the undying loyalty that bound these two friends together embodied in one of the most memorable quotes of the film : 

" For you, a thousand times over" 

This film had me cheering, sitting at the edge of my seat and metaphorically chewing my popcorn a little faster – in the metaphorical sense.  Everything about the film, from the actors, the cinematography, soundtrack and all those technical and artistic elements were great.

And what added to the authenticity of the film was that some of the actors were locals, despite most of the scenes being filmed outside Afghanistan (due to safety reasons). It is a beautiful piece of work and I would recommend this if you’re looking for a story of loyalty, friendship, betrayal, historical, actions, romance… heck, just watch it already!

Imani Dlamini
·         * Image : http://www.imdb.com/

Saturday 5 July 2014

My week as an introvert #1

This is a weekly diary series of the struggles of not being able to always speak your mind.

This week was a rollercoaster, and I'm not exaggerating.

Tuesday: 
 I returned to the gym classes on Tuesday where everyone was apparently in the mood for chit-chat and kept on asking questions about my mentorship, which is not the kind of conversation you want before a yoga session. Chit-chat is just the worst for me "what are your plans for the future" "how are the studies going" can't they ask me something a little more miscellanous like: "who is your favourite author?" or "Which Cary Grant film do you enjoy the most?". The rest of the day was fine, I stayed home and worked on a bit of my Afrikaans. "Hoe gaan dit?"

Wednesday:
Wednesday was a better day for me. I attended gym class with a big smile on my face as I found out that I passed all my exams and to celebrate I got 16 books for the low low price of R500. I also celebrate with nutella, enough said. It was one of those days where I felt confident and invincible.

Thursday:
This was probably the worst day for me. I got in a huge fight with my mom, I was stressing about my application for my degree in August and I had a huge headache. Not a day that should ever be repeated.

Friday:
This day was chilled. Went to a circuit training class with my sister, ate popcorn and watched Episodes and hashed things over with my mom.


-Heather McIntosh
@heatherluvpink

Tuesday 1 July 2014

Book Club: Paper Towns by John Green


"Quentin Jacobson has always loved Margo from afar. So when she climbs through his window to summon him on an all-night road trip of revenge he cannot help but follow. But the next morning, Q turns up at school and Margo doesn't. She's left clues to her disappearance, like a trail of breadcrumbs for Q to follow."

After reading Looking for Alaska and The Fault in Our Stars, I have to be completely honest by saying that I was a bit disappointed in this one. I actually started to get bored of the story after a while. Don't get me wrong, I love John Green, this novel just didn't captivate me like the other two did. But it is the perfect novel if you just want to chill out in your PJs all day and read.

Next Week: The Importance of Being Earnest and other plays by Oscar Wilde

Written by: Heather McIntosh
Twitter: heatherluvpink
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