
Please follow and like us: Queen of Katwe tells the story of a young girl, Phiona Mutesi. This Disney production takes us to two exotic places-urban black Africa, which has seldom been shown with such steadfast exuberance, and the mind of a child with a mysterious gift. Movies by Sharronda Williams - September 22, 2016. 10-year old Phiona spends her days selling maize and helping her family, including her. Queen of Katwe tells the true story of Phiona Mutesi (Madina Nalwanga) - who as a young girl grew up in Katwe, an impoverished region of Kampala, Uganda's capital city. And the director rejoices in the dominant color of her large cast. Queen of Katwe is a heavy-handed variation of the Disney inspirational sports drama formula, but a sincere and well-meaning one too. Nair, the Indian filmmaker who has given us such superb films as “Monsoon Wedding” and “The Namesake,” revels in the energy that flows from color-an unquenchable riot of scarlet, lime, saffron, tangerine, mustard and turquoise in Katwe, the sprawling slum in the capital, Kampala, where the fatherless Phiona works with her mother selling vegetables on the street. Nothing could have prepared Phiona Mutesi (Madina Nalwanga) for the life she would end up with when she entered the small youth ministry building where Robert Katende (David Oyelowo- Selma) was working with several children and.
Queen of katwe review skin#
The first time we see Phiona Mutesi (a remarkable debut by Madina Nalwanga), in the opening scene, her ebony skin and coral sweater are a sight for jaded eyes. A funny thing happens when you walk through certain doors. It’s family entertainment in the freshest sense of the term, a biographical drama, based on a true story, that vibrates with more colors-emotional as well as visual-than I can name. It is a thoroughly heartwarming story in which you’re rooting so hard for the heroine that you scarcely. But this unusually affecting film, directed by Mira Nair, transcends the familiar formula. Queen of Katwe, review: Disneys latest is schematic and predictable but no less rousing. You may find yourself thinking back to the plots of other stories about kids who fulfill their dreams by triumphing against heavy odds. In “Queen of Katwe,” a poor, illiterate girl in Uganda beats her mentor at a game of chess by thinking eight moves ahead, then goes on to prove her prowess in a succession of suspenseful tournaments.
