Four Lions
Rizwan Ahmed Actor , Arsher Ali Actor , Nigel Lindsay Actor , Kayvan Novak Actor , Adeel Akhtar Actor , Benedict Cumberbatch Actor
MPAA Rating:
R
Contains:Profanity,Sexual Situations
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Four Lions
Theatrical Release Date: 2010 11 05 (USA - Limited)
UPC: 876964003995
Studio: Magnolia
MPAA Rating: R Contains:[Profanity, Sexual Situations]
Summary: A handful of young men set out to take on the decadent West but are more of a threat to themselves than anyone else in this black comedy from director Chris Morris. Omar (Riz Ahmed) is a devout Muslim living in the United Kingdom who has decided to form a terrorist cell to bring forth a jihad against a culture he believes is dominated by the sinful and ignorant. However, Omar isn't much of leader, and he's assembled an unimpressive team of fellow terrorists, among them Waj (Kayvan Novak), who lacks the brainpower to come up with ideas or direction on his own; Faisal (Adeel Akhtar), who is shy and doesn't have much to say; and Barry (Nigel Lindsay), a recent convert to Islam who tries to make up for his lack of practical knowledge with fierce passion. As Omar and his comrades debate both doctrine and methods, they ponder such notions as using birds as explosive devices, creating video communiqu?s with a hip-hop flavor, and attacking mosques in an effort to provoke nonviolent Muslims. But are Omar and his partners a legitimate threat to the safety of Great Britain, or just four half-bright twentysomethings with more bluster than imagination? Four Lions received its world premiere at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
Category: Comedy
Awards: Film Presented – Sundance Film Festival Film Presented – SXSW Film Presented – Los Angeles Film Festival Best British Film – British Academy of Film and Television Arts Best British Actor – London Film Critics Association Best Screenplay – London Film Critics Association Breakthrough British Filmmaker – London Film Critics Association Best Screenplay – London Film Critics Association Best Screenplay – London Film Critics Association Best Screenplay – London Film Critics Association Carl Foreman Award – British Academy of Film and Television Arts
Features:
Bradford Interview
Behind The Scenes Segments
Background Material
Deleted Scenes
Storyboards
Four Lions
Format: Blu-ray
Release Date: 03/08/2011
Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1 Theatre Wide-Screen
Audio: DHMA null
Runtime: 102 Minutes
Sides: 1
Number of Discs: 1
Language(s) English
Subtitles: English,Spanish
Derek Armstrong
Chris Morris' Four Lions generated buzz by being one of the first legitimate films to look at Islamic jihadists from a comic perspective, one that isn't informed by the lowest common denominator of out-and-out parody. In fact, with its deadpan humor and cin?ma v?rit? style, it's like a terrorist version of This Is Spinal Tap, with several different characters taking their turn as Nigel Tufnel. But to suggest that Morris is only going for laughs would be to vastly underappreciate his agenda. In fact, far from using this as an opportunity to ridicule true believers who use violence to convey their message, Morris humanizes these radicals like no other Western film has been able to do, or maybe even tried to do. The title of Morris' film is somewhat misleading, as there are actually five prospective suicide bombers who figure into this story, set in Sheffield, England. The loudest and most outspoken is Barry (Nigel Lindsay), a convert to Islam who's hiding in plain sight as a local Muslim spokesperson and regular attendee of public meetings. He's secretly planning an attack on the West -- the target of which is the topic of some debate -- with Omar (Riz Ahmed), a charismatic natural leader and family man; Waj (Kayvan Novak), a good-hearted simpleton who goes with the flow; and Faisal (Adeel Akhtar), a skittish "explosives expert" given to experimenting in broad daylight. While Omar and Waj are called away to a terrorist training camp in Pakistan, where they quickly wear out their welcome, Barry recruits a young zealot named Hassan (Arsher Ali) after Hassan makes a demonstration at a public meeting, "detonating" several "bombs" filled with colored party streamers. When Omar and Waj return from Pakistan with their tails between their legs, it's clear the group must become the masters of their own destinies and find a local target on which to martyr themselves. A rift divides the group when Barry wants to bomb a local mosque, a counterintuitive plot intended to radicalize moderate Muslims, but Omar wants to hit a charitable fun-run, in which the runners will be wearing mascot costumes. To be sure, Four Lions gets good mileage from poking fun at the various archetypal methods and procedures involved in terrorist behavior. The opening scene sets the tone, as the group records a video in which Waj is holding a comically small machine gun, then practices swallowing their cell phone SIM cards to avoid being tracked -- when in fact the reverse outcome would be achieved. Moments like these are scattered throughout the film, and almost always bring big laughs, in part because they show restraint, never crossing over into the realm of the ridiculous. It would have been easy for Morris and co-writers Sam Bain and Jesse Armstrong to portray these men as clowns and bumblers whose every idea is moronic. The terrorists in Four Lions are funnier because they are basically intelligent men who have the resources and strategies to pull off an attack, but are often undone by a fatal blindness to the consequences of certain tactics and ideas. Where Four Lions surprises is the moments that are not supposed to be funny, which never seem out of synch with the film's overall tone. Morris and company are genuinely interested in what motivates these men, as well as the apparent contradictions built into their lives. Take Omar, for example. He lives a basically Western existence with a loving wife and son, even using Disney's The Lion King as a metaphor to explain fundamentalism to his son. Yet their collective support of the jihad and its heavenly rewards is so ingrained, neither his wife nor his son seems overly concerned about the fact that their husband/father is planning to kill himself. Not only that, but when Omar's pacifist brother, Ahmed (Wasim Zakir), comes to their house, trying to talk Omar out of it, Omar and his wife laugh at Ahmed's enslavement to the principles of Islam, which state that he should not enter the same room as a woman who is not his wife. This gets at the core of how terrorists pick and choose which parts of the Qu'ran may support their agenda, ignoring the many more parts that seem inconvenient. Shrewdly, Morris is not trying to paint his characters as fools for the various inconsistencies in their world view. He merely paints them as human, so thoroughly and so effectively that even the most hawkish counterterrorists in the audience should feel a limited affection for them as protagonists -- everyone else, much more than that. Speaking of the various public attitudes toward the war on terror, Morris also takes a telling stance on the regular British citizens who repeatedly encounter the jihadists at exactly the wrong moments. Even when confronted with a preponderance of evidence suggesting suspicious behavior, these Brits pathologically refuse to jump to conclusions -- a sly comment on how political correctness and fears of racial profiling have blunted our ability to identify legitimate warning signs. Four Lions' balancing act between hilarious joke-slinging and earnest social commentary gives it a meatiness most comedies don't have, and a lightness not found in almost any film that takes terrorism seriously. In fact, if the war on terror could be brokered with the kind of grace and equal-opportunity humor shown in this film, common ground might not seem nearly so elusive. ~ Derek Armstrong, Rovi
Cast and Crew:
Peter Carlton
Executive Producer
Tessa Ross
Executive Producer
Alex Marshall
Executive Producer
Jesse Armstrong
Screenwriter
Sam Bain
Screenwriter
Simon Blackwell
Screenwriter
Rita Dagher
Executive Producer
Mark Herbert
Producer
Will Clarke
Executive Producer
Caroline Leddy
Executive Producer
Chris Morris
Director
Chris Morris
Screenwriter
Derrin Schlesinger
Producer
Carole Baraton
Executive Producer
Angus Aynsley
Executive Producer
Mark Findlay
Executive Producer
Rizwan Ahmed
Actor
Arsher Ali
Actor
Nigel Lindsay
Actor
Kayvan Novak
Actor
Adeel Akhtar
Actor
Benedict Cumberbatch
Actor
Julia Davis
Actor
Craig Parkinson
Actor
Preeya Kalidas
Actor
Wasim Zakir
Actor
Mohammad Aqil
Actor
Country: UK

