Winner of the Golden Bear, the Prize of the Ecumenical Jury and
the Peace Film Prize at the 2003 Berlin International Film Festival,
Michael Winterbottom’s In This World tells the story of two
Afghan cousins who embark on a refugee’s clandestine odyssey
from Pakistan to London. Shot on digital video with a non-professional
cast, In This World harnesses the immediacy of nonfiction techniques
to create an urgent, intimate account of human beings driven by
the fundamental urge to create a better life. It is a film that
is both timely and timeless, and affirms Winterbottom (24 Hour Party
People, The Claim, Welcome to Sarajevo) as a one of cinema’s
strongest, most original talents.
February 2002, in the northwest province of Peshawar, Pakistan,
near the Afghan border. Sixteen-year-old Jamal, an orphan, lives
in the sprawling Shamshatoo refugee camp and earns less than $1
a day working in a brick factory. Jamal’s older cousin, Enayat,
lives in the bustling heart of Peshawar, where he works at his family’s
market stall. At a wedding banquet, Jamal learns that Enayat’s
family has decided to send him to London, where prospects are brighter.
Jamal knows a man who can facilitate the journey, whom he later
introduces to the family. Jamal is also quick to point out that
since Enayat doesn’t speak English, he will need a companion
who does – like Jamal. The hefty upfront fee for the journey
is paid in dollars and rupees, and Jamal and Enayat join the estimated
1 million people annually who place their lives in the hands of
people smugglers.
Lacking the cash for two air journeys, Jamal and Enayat must take
the longer, more dangerous overland route, which will take them
from Asia to Europe. From Peshawar, they board a southward bus for
Quetta, where they are to contact the fixer who will arrange their
passage into western Pakistan. From there on, nothing is certain.
The cousins endure days of tedium and anxiety, followed by sudden,
frantic movement. They must decide whom they can trust, and try
to parse unfamiliar languages in foreign lands. From Tehran, they
travel into the country’s Kurdish region, bordering Turkey;
they cross the border at night, hiking in the bitter wind while
armed soldiers patrol below. Once in Istanbul, Jamal and Enayat
face the most harrowing portion of the journey: 40 hours sealed
in a freight container bound for Italy, crowded with other immigrants
and refugees. Many suffocate in their metal cell before they reach
Trieste, Italy.
But for survivors, the journey must continue, through Italy and
on to the refugee camp at Sangatte, France. And at last, in June
2002, the final leg: stowing away underneath the chassis of a truck,
which will link up with a freight train headed for the U.K.
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