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maltatoday, SUNDAY, 4 MAY 2014 THIS WEEK 34 Embassy Cinemas Valletta Tel. 21 227436, 21 245818 Amazing Spiderman 2 3D (PG) 10:20, 14:30, 18:00, 21:00 The Love Punch (12A) 21:15 Simshar (12A) 10:15, 13:45, 16:10, 18:30, 20:55 The Other Woman (12A) 10:25, 13:45, 16:10, 18:40, 21:10 Rio 2 (U) 10:00, 12:10, 14:20, 16:35, 18:50 Noah (12A) 17:45, 20:45 Pompeii (12A) 10:30, 13:40, 16:05, 18:25, 20:50 Eden Cinemas St Julian's Tel. 23 710400 Rio 2 (U) 14:00, 16:05, 18:25, 20:45, 23:00 Captain America: The Winter Soldier (12A) 14:20, 17:50, 20:45, 23:35 Ride Along (12A) 14:15, 16:25, 18:40, 21:10, 23:20 The Other Woman (12A) 14:05, 16:25, 18:45, 21:15, 23:40 Noah (12A) 14:30, 18:05, 20:55, 23:45 The Amazing Spider-Man 2 3D (PG) 14:20, 17:50, 20:50, 23:45 Tarzan 3D 3D (PG) 14:10, 16:20, 18:40, 21:00, 23:10 Saul: The Journey to Damascus (PG) 14:15, 16:30, 18:40, 21:10, 23:10 Need For Speed (12A) 14:30, 18:10, 20:50, 23:30 The Grand Budapest Hotel (12A) 14:10, 16:20, 18:35, 21:05, 23:20 Non-Stop (12A) 14:15, 16:30, 18:50, 21:05, 23:20 Pompeii 3D (12A) 14:05, 16:25, 18:45, 21:15, 23:35 Divergent (12A) 14:30, 18:05, 20:55, 23:45 Empire Cinemas Bugibba Tel. 21 581787, 21 581909 Rio 2 3D (U) 17:45 The Amazing Spirder-Man 2 (12A) 10:45, 21:05 The Amazing Spirder-Man 2 3D (12A) 13:55, 18:05 Pompeii (12A) 10:30, 13:45, 16:00, 18:15, 20:45 Noah (12A) 10:40, 13:50, 21:00 Simshar (12A) 11:15, 13:35, 15:55, 18:15, 20:45 The Book Thief (12A) 10:30, 14:00. 18:10, 20:55 Philomena (12A) 10:45, 13:35, 16:00, 18:25, 20:50 The Monuments Men (12A) 10:35, 13:30, 16:00, 18:35, 21:10 SIMSHAR, the long-awaited Mal- tese feature film co-written and directed by Rebecca Cremona, is far from perfect. In many ways, its f laws are the kind of f laws you encounter in a debut film of any kind. If anything, its slightly creaky middle-section and its ambitious-by-comparison scope are indicative of the kind of move a debuting storyteller makes when they're starting out. But the film also comes bur- dened with the pressure of being the first 'bona fide' feature film to emerge from Malta. And by bona fide I here mean a film we can proudly showcase to an inter- national audience – which simply wasn't possible with any previ- ous offerings our filmmakers had dished out in local cinemas. So it's to Cremona's credit – and that of her cast and crew, of course: she once told me that "half the is- land" was somehow roped in to make Simshar a reality – that the film works as a coherent whole: its pacing may be creaky in parts, with some of the acting leaving much to be desired – but it's also a politically sensitive, sumptuously shot drama that ultimately deliv- ers an emotional punch. Set around the real-life 'Sim- shar' tragedy which occurred in 2008, the film – co-written by Rebecca Cremona and David Grech – takes as its starting point the accident involving the titular fishing boat, which left Simon Bugeja's (Lotfi Abdelli) 11-year- old son Theo (Adrian Farrugia) and father Karmenu (Jimi Busut- til) dead at sea. A parallel story, also in the Mediterranean, zooms in on the fate of a medic, Alex (Mark Mif- sud), who is ordered to stay on a boat harbouring rescued African migrants, which Malta and Italy refuse access to, while his friend John (Chrysander Agius) strug- gles with the migrant situation on the ground. As the incident erupts, Simon's wife Sharin (Clare Agius) is left grasping for answers, and as the story toggles between the Buge- jas' Marsaxlokk community, the Turkish Merchant vessel which has rescued a group of stranded African boat people between Malta and Italy and the scene of the tragedy itself, another victim risks being claimed: diligent mi- grant worker Moussa (Sékouba Doucouré), hired by Simon to help them on an off-the-radar fishing expedition. The real-life story clearly crack- les with dramatic potential from the word go: there's a family trag- edy at its (human) centre, though the film is of course framed by the perennially problematic reality of irregular migration. Simshar is at its best when it's bringing us into this world, ek- ing out the universal from a very local, headline-grabbing event. Cinematographer Chris Freilich and production designers Nina Gerada and Jonathan Hagos are to be commended for breathing life to the Marsaxlokk setting in particular. Whether they're rep- resenting the daily bustle of the fishing village or the chaos of the festa, the place feels lived-in and immersive, never a picture-post- card depiction. It's also just as well that our real entry point into the story comes not from an overarching polemic about immigration but through the struggles of the local fish- ing community: the real reason Simon and his father embark on their risky journey is down to the fact that EU bureaucracy is sti- f ling their trade. Sadly, too many discordant notes pollute the film to be ig- nored. Though Cremona justifies the casting of Tunisian actor Ab- delli in the leading role as being chief ly down to the fact that the production needed a "name" ac- tor to attract international part- ners, the fact remains that his accent will grate with local audi- ences (granted, this will probably not be the case once – and if – the film is shown abroad). Though Jimi Busuttil delivers an effective and refreshingly ear- nest performance that never rings false, some of the local actors struggle in their roles too. Agius and Mifsud appear stuck in 'Mal- tese television' mode, never quite succeeding in going beyond one set emotional register – a resting 'serious face'; brows knit in per- petual concern – which isn't an insignificant f law given that their characters are meant to stand in for the ambivalent attitude most Maltese people feel towards mi- grants. Alex's character arc is also somewhat problematic. An early outburst positions him as a bit of an intolerant jerk; an ethical quan- dary he recovers from in a f lash to become the effective hero of the piece (he even gets something re- sembling a romantic connection with boat-bound migrant and de facto translator Makeda – a taste- fully understated performance by Laura Kpegli). Arguably, film would actually have been served better by a mini-series structure, which would have allowed the plot's separate strands to unfold at a clearer, more leisurely pace. As is the case with any film based on a well-publicised trag- edy, we sadly know how it's all go- ing to end, which naturally takes some of the sting out of the build up of suspense. But as the film narrows to a close, Cremona suc- ceeds in creating a genuine emo- tional crescendo, tugging at the heartstrings but never descend- ing into melodrama. Simshar is a passable 'indie' drama: no more, no less. That it can't help but wearing its rough- and-tumble nature on its sleeve is, therefore, quite expected. FILM IN CINEMAS TODAY By Teodor Reljic Braving choppy waters ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ BOAT ★ ★ ★ ★ MOAT ★ ★ ★ COAT ★ ★ GOAT ★ GROWTH Adrift: Adrian Farrugia, Lofti Abidelli and Sékouba Doucouré YOUR FIRST CLICK OF THE DAY www.maltatoday.com.mt SIMSHAR (12) ★ ★ ★