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THE (director: Maggie Betts;
cinematographer: Kathryn
Westergaard; editors: Flavia De Souza/Geeta Gandbhir;
music: Daniel Miller/David Della Santa; cast: Mutinta Mweemba;
Runtime: 88; MPAA Rating: NR; producer: Ben Selkow; Tent
Full of Birds; 2010-USA/Zambia) "Inspirational documentary." Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz Maggie Betts is a first-time filmmaker. Her bio on IMDB says she's a native New Yorker and longtime advocate for the rights of HIV positive women and children in sub-Saharan Africa. She has spent the past five years traveling throughout the continent as a volunteer and philanthropist for various United Nations organizations. The inspirational
documentary tells the human interest story of the 28-year-old Mutinta
Mweemba, a native of Zambia, living as a farmer in the
rural village of Keemba. She is the second wife in a polygamous marriage of
three. Her strong husband Abarcon, whom she married
when she was 16, wants a large family. Mutinta has two children
and is pregnant, and says "I love being called a
Mother." The problem is that her philanderer husband is HIV positive.
She will sadly find out from a lab test that so is she
and the first wife, who will soon die. There is no
proof offered how she contacted AIDS, but all
indications it was through her hubby. Her aim now is
to protect her pregnant baby, and she enrolls in the
local clinic where she's given medication and
instruction to prevent her daughter from being HIV
positive. Her struggle with her selfish husband and
his aloof third wife, and how she retreats with her
children to live with dignity is a heart-felt story of
a brave woman doing her best to cope with a bad
situation. It's probably too bleak a story for a wide
audience, but the heroine is a person the viewer can
be sympathetic too and root for things to get better
when it's learned her youngest, when an infant, tested
HIV negative. REVIEWED ON 12/10/2011 GRADE: B- Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |