A wail of a documentary-like movie
John Depko
The film industry of India is known for its prolific output and
standard plots centering on historical epics or musical romance.
“Lesson One: A Wail” is a clear departure from this formula of
moviemaking. This documentary-like film presents a harsh look at a
dark reality of rural Indian life: the virtual selling of Muslim
teenage girls into forced marriage and sexual slavery.
The story centers on a beautiful and intelligent 15-year-old girl who excels in her studies at school. One by one, the underage female
students disappear from her class as their parents force them into
early marriages with traditional Muslim men. They will not allow a
woman to pursue an education or any other activity without their
permission. She watches the unhappy fate of her friends as they must
become totally submissive to the whims of their brutish husbands.
When her own parents follow the village custom and arrange her
marriage as the second wife of a much older man, she rebels in every
way she can. Her painful uphill battle against this age-old practice
is the centerpiece of the screenplay.
This simple film is a scathing indictment of the woman-hating
attitudes and ritual abuse perpetrated by Indian men on thousands of
young women every year. While it lacks the sophistication of American
production values, its stark subject matter is sure to be
controversial in its native India.
“Wail” is in native Indian languages subtitled in English. It
screens at noon today at the Edwards Island 5.
* JOHN DEPKO is a Costa Mesa resident and a senior investigator
for the Orange County public defender’s office.
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