He Named Me Malala

He Named Me Malala

2015, PG-13, 87 min. Directed by Davis Guggenheim.

REVIEWED By Marjorie Baumgarten, Fri., Oct. 9, 2015

Inspirational figures hardly come more heroic and ready-made than Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani teen who survived being shot in the head by the Taliban for espousing education for girls. The youngest person to ever receive the Nobel Peace Prize, Yousafzai is an international icon who now makes her home in England with her family. Sadly, this documentary by the director of the Oscar-winning An Inconvenient Truth, is as superfluous as they come. He Named Me Malala repeats the well-known facts of Yousafzai’s history and offers little insight into the now 18-year-old teenager that exists behind the icon. Uplift is the film’s only goal.

Frustratingly, Guggenheim skirts numerous opportunities to dig more deeply into Yousafzai’s life. The documentary is most interesting when we see Yousafzai at home with her parents and brothers, rather then when she’s speaking to the dignitaries or traveling to other continents in support of girls’ education. At home we see her mooning over handsome cricket stars and practicing her hand at card tricks, while her two brothers steal the screen whenever the camera is loosed on them. What is it like to be an inspirational international figure at such a tender age? And what of her relationship with her father who named her Malala, itself a name taken from ancient lore? Devoted to his daughter and endlessly supportive, the fact remains that the daughter seems to be fulfilling some of her father’s dreams. Then there’s her mother, who seems more conservative than the rest of the family and has a harder time adjusting to life in exile. How does that female role model factor into her daughter’s life?

The inclusion of more unguarded moments would make He Named Me Malala appear to be more of a documentary profile than a marketing tool. Certainly, marketing the insidious idea of equal education for girls throughout the world is an essential and worthy objective, especially when an emblematic figure such as Yousafzai is at the ready. However, don’t come to this documentary expecting to learn more about the girl named Malala.

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More Davis Guggenheim Films
Waiting for 'Superman'
More provocative than genuinely informative, this documentary, nevertheless, has kicked off a national discussion about remedying our failing educational system.

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KEYWORDS FOR THIS FILM

He Named Me Malala, Davis Guggenheim

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