Harat, Afghanistan’s roads are not with gold but with scrolling code in enthusiastic drama “Breaking the rules“Teacher and startup owner Roy Mehboob believes in the transformative possibilities of computer. Painted with a mixture of stubborn and smart by Nichel Bushery, cried is a kind of ponder that sees images from the computer screen and senses of rainbow code on the walls and roadways of Herat’s building.
“The first time I touched a computer, it was like a light in the dark,” the young teacher, saying, stood in front of a class of rap high school girls in Herat province. Similarly, “Rules Breakers” can be said, which tells the story of Roya and recruit four talented students for Afghanistan’s first robotics team.
While director Bill gutantag More than breaking with them in style rules, the film is a ray of light – about mathematics, science and ability to achieve girls – when not only reached an instant when the Taliban continues to aggressively denied girls in Afghanistan, but science is also taking a hit in our own country. We can all use some light.
As played by Botheri, wept is a true believer – or, as Sameer (Ali Fazal), Indian tech entrepreneurs who are both patron and champions, once say more than once, is “a very frequent person.” He has to be. Initially, Roya, Ilaha and his brother Ali (Nurin Ghulamgoss) are taken to the dusty road by members of the masked Taliban in a Rewing truck.
As the rifle states out of the truck window, the film is cut 18 years ago. This is 1999 and Roya’s father encourages his younger daughter to be eager as boys about computers coming to their classroom. (She is not the only winning girl in the film.) Although she tries, she and other girls are excluded by the teacher, who then introduces boys to freshly unpacked computer. Crys looks from outside.
It can be excluded, but it does not prevent him from receiving his hands on a computer. A few years old and more operated, she achieves access to a bakery cafe. She makes a deal with the owner of the outpost bakery, one she would not really believe that she would have to make it good. Soon he is the shop’s IT troubleshooting. Later, she pitchs a computer science class, then receives an unexpected percentage of students to support her. Bizarre but unpublished film can be the theme.
Crying is lucky, as the encounter on the road in 2017 can be fatal or at least eliminated her discovery to teach coding and other technical skills to girls. The way she recruits four mathematics spectacles for her first robotics team, she is portrayed with beats that will be familiar to the enthusiasts of the sports movie. Nevertheless, search – and later, scenes of competition – their magic work. Tara (Nina Hosinzadeh), Hadiya (Sarah Malal Rowe), Arzo (Maryam Saraz) and Axin (Amber Afzali) develop a sweet chemistry. Certainly, we pull the quartet to win international competitions and their claatering inventions, but more than that we hope they grow and thrive at the strictness of the house.
Filmmakers make sure that the age of age for children on screen take a look at what those robotics meetings are for their competitors that come from all over the world. They are a stupid party! Brain children prove competitive, but are also ally and curious about each other. They represent diverse ethnicities and nationalities, and there are lots of girls’ problems and leading teams. “Around here, everyone helps each other,” a child says.
There will be failures, so many setbacks. Some will be technical, others logistic or bureaucracy. Some people will throw obstacles (including the US embassy). But the unexpected colleagues and the causes of the team are converted, also appear: passengers are waiting for the flight to Kabul, an American technology reporter, perhaps also the owner of that annoying bakery.
On the way, robots – which are similar to mobile eractor sets – get more agile and functional. If the first competition in Washington, DC, it seems that it decreases, it is because much will happen. And if wept seems overwhelmed by its initial achievements, this is because she expects her team to improve. He is no one to settle.
There will also be blackback. As the team has attracted the attention of the international press, pay attention to the Taliban and other rejections at the house. A disastrous disadvantage forced Roya to reconsider his advocacy. Fortunately, he is not the only acting of the dream.
Since the 9/11 attacks, there are a handful of compelling and moving films about girls and young women, pushing against the oppressive Islamic rule of their countries, among them: “Osama,” set in Afghanistan; Set in Saudi Arabia “Wadjada,”; In Tehran “situation,”; And the American -made documentary about education activist Malala Yusufzai “he named me Malala,” who was almost killed by the Taliban.
Those films are deeply placed in cultures that they portray and illuminate more for it. But to keep the story of cried and her young heroes in a tried and orgasting format, Gutantag celebrates the surprising achievement of her smart female heroes and gives a recreational argument about the global importance of STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) education for all children.
“Rule Breakers” comes at a time when the situation continues for women and girls in Afghanistan. Neither Mehboob sisters (Elalah co-written the screenplay) nor other robotics team members currently live in Afghanistan. No matter how inspiring the “rules break” – and it is surprisingly – somehow acts as caution.