Film: A Small Act
Release date: Out now
Year: 2010
Director: Jennifer Arnold
UK Distributor: Dogwoof
Running time: 88 mins
Classification: Exempt
Genre: Documentary
Country: Kenya/Sweden
Subtitles: English
Reviewer: Daryl Wing
As most of us struggle to get by while others that
contribute very little and take advantage of everything, extract money from the
government and our ever-tightening belts, and with so many twenty and
thirty-something’s forced to live at home because they cannot afford to move
out or find work, it’s somewhat reassuring to discover that some people still
donate to charities and good causes, forgetting their plight to help others.
When Hilde Back sponsored a young, rural Kenyan student, she thought nothing of
it. She certainly never expected to hear from him many years later.
Chris Mburu, a Harvard graduate and a Human Rights Lawyer
for the United Nations, decides to find the stranger that changed his life.
Inspired by her generosity, he starts a scholarship program of his own and
names it after his former benefactor.
The top students in Mukubu primary school are in the exact
same situation as Chris once was. They are bright, but can’t afford to pay
school fees. With the creation of Chris’ fund, these students have new hope.
But the program is small. How many will qualify for a
scholarship?
You would be forgiven if you thought Simon Cowell was all
over this. Director Jennifer Arnold must be a huge fan of talent shows if this
documentary is anything to go by. Instead of a heartwarming story of hope,
she’s managed to turn Chris Mburu’s generosity into some cruel, life-shattering
nightmare. And it’s not just the children that are affected. In fact, the
children, carrying such a heavy burden, take it on the chin for the most part,
while the elders rue their misfortune for having created such thick kids by
looking seriously cheesed off when results day arrives. It’s heartbreaking
stuff.
We’ve all heard about the butterfly effect; where a small
change at one place in a nonlinear system can result in large differences to a
later state. Here, a Swedish woman called Hilde Back - a retired schoolteacher
and Holocaust survivor - participated in a charity that sponsored Kenyan
schoolchildren. It was the sixties, but she managed to unselfishly donate the
equivalent of around £20 a month, and it made a huge difference.
When that boy, Chris Mburu, tracks her down, we already know
that he became a lawyer and UN diplomat and was inspired to set up a
scholarship in Hilde's name. But we don’t know much about Hilde's own story
because, for the most part, A Small Act is less concerned with this subject as
it focuses on the pressures put upon the three children all praying for a slice
of the pie. You can see why too. Although Hilde should be applauded for her
selfless act, and watching footage of her meeting Chris for the first time is
sugar sweet (a Harvard sweater scene will melt most hearts), the documentary
only really fascinates when we are with the whippersnappers as they –
reluctantly at times – study and study, then study some more in order to escape
the poverty that surrounds them.
The three children – Kimani, Caroline and Wambui – are the
top three in their school, but each knows that only one of them will be offered
a scholarship. They all have tragic stories, but it’s the two girls’ hardships
that really get under the skin. Either that or Kimani just doesn’t show his
emotions quite as freely. That’s boys for you. Then again, he’s quite happy to
admit his love for Caroline; a girl who mostly can’t study at night because
they rarely have lamp oil. With education the only way to change someone’s life
- as it did Chris’s - the tests, distributed under police guard, take place
over three torturous days. Up to this point Arnold’s documentary is fairly
interesting, but only now will you be transfixed.
Chris Mburu’s heart is clearly in the right place; he knows
education is the way forward, but subjecting children and their families to
such torture doesn’t always seem like the right way, especially as the results
don’t arrive for between 4-6 weeks, even longer after a general election. In
the meantime we’re forced to watch politics boil over into violence as those
elections are disputed, with the loss of many lives. The trouble is, such
troubles in Kenya, although horrific, have little effect on the children we’ve
got to know over the opening hour (their village isn’t affected), and thus it
feels more like filler until we finally return to our three hopefuls as they
sit in front of a mobile phone, waiting for their results to be sent to them
via text.
And boy do they wait. A supposed fifteen-minute delay
quickly becomes one hour, then four, until Kimani is finally rewarded for his
patience 31 hours later. And then his phone dies. Heartwarming then
heartbreaking, what follows is one of the most joyless and depressing ten
minutes of film in recent memory. While some of Mburu’s compatriots want a
fifty-fifty gender divide on those who receive scholarships, regardless of results,
he ultimately knows that his hopes for someone to follow in his footsteps have
created far too much pressure on those involved, proven by the disappointingly
low results. As decision day arrives, you’re already well aware that one, or
two, or maybe even all three of the children this documentary has followed are
in for a life-changing verdict, and not for the better.
A Small Act works best when we are forced to endure the
heartbreak of its three children praying for an escape from poverty. Although
Chris Mburu’s story is heartwarming and relevant, his meetings with his sponsor
– although utterly unique - bog down a documentary that should’ve concentrated
on Kenya’s current plight to have real impact.
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