A remote village in Lebanon remains technologically isolated from its
surrounding politico-cultural environment which erupts in a religious
war. Seeking to ensure that no more of their children are needlessly
slaughtered, its Christian and Muslim female inhabitants unite to
distract their masculine counterparts. However, regardless of the fact
that they know nothing of the war, tensions between these men have been
increasing due to sacrilegious activities that have inspired
retribution.
Trying to covertly manage the vindictive violence proves challenging.
A challenge to which these heroic women stalwartly, respond.
Exercising a seductive mix of the expedient, the temperamental, and the divine, Nadine Labaki's Et maintenant on va où? (Where Do We Go Now?) fictionally verifies how destructive overtures can be pacified within pressurized time constraints.
Certain
aspects of the solution they facilitate may have practical applications
beyond said constraints, although reflecting upon whether or not their
means justifies their ends pasteurizes acute ethical dilemmas.
Nevertheless, a powerful film with a progressive message, Et maintenant on va où suggests
that a rural dynamic can play an influential role in the byzantine
global mosaic, as a matter of perseverance as opposed to pride, or
acceptance as the foundations of transcendence.
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