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Kauwboy

Kauwboy (2012)

April. 18,2012
|
7.1
| Drama Family

A lively young boy befriends and attempts to raise an abandoned baby jackdaw unbeknownst to his choleric and disapproving father.

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Yannis Sfetkos
2012/04/18

Do you like dull and boring movies? If so then this movie is for you. Same European low budget film which is based on deep meanings where only sophisticated audience will get. Also considered art, not for a shallow thinkers and audience like us. Acting of a 10 year old and a bird. Actually this movie is so boring I could place it in the top 10 boring movies of all time.

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griz-259-175100
2012/04/19

In an era when many movies are just re-hashes of other movies this little production distinguishes itself. Very watchable. Touching. Engaging. Real. Anyone who has known loss way too soon in life will identify. The lead actor has real talent. You quickly forget you're watching an actor, so natural is his performance. And the directing distinguishes itself as well. It's said never work with animals or children, or animal-like children (hey, he growls and bites!). But the performance coaxed out of this young talent is notable. And I can't imagine working with a bird was any easier. Kudos all around And please do watch it until the very end for a very special scene.

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Shirley Kramer
2012/04/20

Kauwboy is about a ten year old who finds a bird that fell out of it's nest. He places it back. but the bird falls out again. The boy, Jojo decides he will take care of the bird, which he has to do secretly, because his father has anger issues, stemming from grief, which he sometimes takes out on Jojo. Being able to shower the bird with love, is a welcome distraction for the boy, who deals with frustration and denial.The acting is pretty good, especially since Rick Lens (Jojo) is so young. He portrays emotions well. Loek Peters (the father) is doing a good job balancing between anger and love.This movie is not suited for young children and not "uplifting". In fact, it had me in tears for the most part. Despite this, Kauwboy is certainly worth watching.Spoiler alert regarding the bird: The bird dies. Not by the father.

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PoppyTransfusion
2012/04/21

The first feature for the director is a character study involving a young boy (approximately 10 years old) and his father. The film opens with the young boy, Jojo, washing up and then being challenged by his father to a race that is a repeated pattern between them. After the race with his father Jojo discovers a jackdaw chick fallen from its nest in a tree. He climbs the tree intending to place the chick back in its nest but the chick falls from his grasp onto the ground, but survives a second fall. Admiring the chick's toughness Jojo takes him home to rear him.So begins a tale of the love and attachment between Jojo and the chick, named Jack. Interrupting their poignant and often funny relationship is Jojo's father who is presented as loving but prone to aggression. He does not agree with keeping the chick and twice releases the bird warning Jojo to not bring him home again. But as Jojo tells his father he and Jack are attached to one another and so they keep finding one another in spite of the father's warnings.During the film we see Jojo apparently talking to his mother on the 'phone. Although she never appears in the film as a character she is manifested through songs and photos that show she was a singer with Jojo's father. Her absence is revealed towards the end when we learn that she is dead and that Jojo will not admit this and allow himself to grieve her; and neither will his father. The film becomes increasingly piquant as Jojo and his father's grief are revealed and these feelings collide with the unfortunate accident that kills Jack.What sustains the film, rescuing it from being so distressing as to be devastating or sentimental, is the realistic relationship between father and son that is compelling and in which there is much love. The choreography and dialogue between the male actor playing the father and the child playing Jojo is spot-on. The director said that he was interested in the dynamics of father-son relationships and the film succeeds in portraying one such relationship.Jojo's relationship with Jack is symbolic of his attachment to his dead mother who he will not let go though his father urges and demands him to do so. Jojo keeps her flame alive in her music and his memories. The bird's death when it happens is shocking and an audible gasp was heard from the audience in the cinema; I gasped too. We never learn how Jojo's mother died but one can assume that the suddenness and impact of Jack's death reflects Jojo's experience of his mother's.A great first feature from the director displaying an adroitness in handling complex feelings and relationships. The bleak subject matter is elevated by the character of Jojo who is a vivid and vibrant character in which much hope is invested and the film closes on another flame lit in his life just as the ones for his mother and Jack are extinguished.(NB There were children in the audience when I saw the film and there was tears and shock from both children and adults. The film presents and does not shirk from the difficulties in a child's life and as such can be educative, in the best sense, for children providing their parents/guardians can bear the feelings and questions it evokes.)

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