Half of a Yellow Sun (DVD REVIEW)
Half of a Yellow Sun
DVD Review by Kam Williams
Headline: Romance Saga Set in Nigeria Released on DVD
Twins Kainene (Anika Noni
Rose) and Olanna (Thandie Newton) hail from a well-to-do Nigerian family
well-enough connected to send them overseas to college where they majored in business and sociology, respectively. Ironically, while the sisters were acquiring a
first-rate Western education in England,
the independence movement back home was seeking to
sever its ties with Great
Britain.
After graduating in
the early Sixties, they returned to Lagos
to launch their careers, only to land in distracting love affairs. Attractive
Olanna became the mistress of Odenigbo (Chiwetel Ejiofor), an outspoken college
professor who’d caught the anti-colonial fever, whereas willful Kainene entertained the advances of Richard (Joseph
Mawle), a white expatriate writing a book about African art.
Sibling rivalry moves Kainene to tease
her twin about the philanderer disdainfully referred to as “The Revolutionary.”
Nevertheless, Olanna relocates to the bush to be with Odenigbo and his loyal
manservant, Ugwu (John Boyega). However, upon subsequently learning that
Odenigbo has been unfaithful, she readily rationalizes seducing her sister’s
suitor for a one-night stand.
The resulting strain on the
siblings’ relationship leads to their drifting apart, a development dwarfed by
the bloody, three-year civil war which erupts all around them when Biafra
secedes from the union. All of the above elements add fuel to the fires of Half of a Yellow Sun, the highly-anticipated screen version
of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie‘s best-selling novel of the same name.
The film marks the impressive
directorial debut of Biyi Bandele, who also adapted the 543-page opus into a
113-minute saga that walks a fine line between romance drama and sprawling
epic. That being said, the picture’s examination of the country’s explosive
Christian-Muslim tribal tensions proves to be both timely and compelling, given
how they’ve recently resurfaced during the radical group Boko Haram’s current
reign of terror.
A steamy soap
opera unfolding against the backdrop of a cautionary history lesson reminding
us that in Nigeria,
the more things change, the more they stay insane.
Very Good (3 stars)
Rated
R for violence and sexuality
Running
time: 113 minutes
Distributor:
Monterey
Video
DVD
extras: Interviews with the cast and crew; “On Location” documentaries; a
behind-the-scenes featurette; and “The Kiss,” a short film by Biyi Bandele.
To
see a trailer for Half of a Yellow Sun,
visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iq2dNtP-2hU&list=UUJT0RwcR7HRLljiEEvF4x9A
To
order a copy of Half of a Yellow Sun on DVD,
visit:
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