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The Deminer

Play trailer Poster for The Deminer 2017 1h 23m Documentary Play Trailer Watchlist
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100% Tomatometer 14 Reviews 86% Popcornmeter Fewer than 50 Ratings
Armed only with his courage and some wire cutters, a Kurdish colonel disarms thousands of bombs.

Critics Reviews

View All (14) Critics Reviews
Simran Hans Observer (UK) A difficult, thrilling watch. Rated: 4/5 Apr 29, 2018 Full Review Malika Kingston Little White Lies Not all heroes wear spandex and can fly. Some just have a pocket knife and nerves of steel. Rated: 4/5 Apr 27, 2018 Full Review Kevin Maher Times (UK) This horrifically intense documentary about a Kurdish mine-clearing expert, Colonel Fakhir Berwari, unfolds as the real-world answer to The Hurt Locker. Rated: 3/5 Apr 26, 2018 Full Review Vladan Petkovic Cineuropa Besides the inevitably epic narrative, [directors Hogir Hirori and Shinwar Kamal] also manage to create moments of poetry, economically observing human relations and the protagonist's relationship with his surroundings. Sep 15, 2020 Full Review Rob Aldam Backseat Mafia A portrait of a dedicated man who is prepared to give his life to save others. Nov 8, 2018 Full Review Alison Rowat The Herald (Scotland) A SENSE of foreboding comes with the territory in this Iraq-set documentary. Rated: 3/5 May 2, 2018 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

View All (2) audience reviews
Audience Member Was at the edge of my seat the entire time. Simply breathtaking with courage on a whole other level. You could almost feel he knew his fate, yet kept fighting. Well done Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/13/23 Full Review Audience Member Colonel Fakhir Berwari (â~Crazy Fakhirâ(TM) to his American comrades) was a Kurdish military officer, serving in Iraq between 2003 and 2008, who was tasked with defusing thousands of land-mines left by insurgents after the fall of Saddam Hussein at the end of the second Iraqi war. Armed with a pair of wire-cutters and no safety equipment, he nonchalantly sets about the task of making the streets of Mosul safe again for children to play on. After losing a leg to a roadside bomb, he courageously volunteers to return and aid in the dismantling of booby-trapped houses left by ISIS after their occupation in the power vacuum that followed years later. An even more dangerous enterprise that would ultimately cost him his life. What makes this an interesting documentary, is it is comprised primarily of footage shot by Fakhir himself - he tasked a subordinate to film him each time he defused a mine, to serve as a training device for fellow â~deminersâ(TM). The tapes were only found later on, by his son, and serve as the foundation for this documentary. Presented as home movie footage, there is no narration, just the commentary of his cameraman. This raw presentation really ratchets up the tension as there is no indication as to whether Fakhir will succeed each time he approaches a device. Indeed we witness two incidents that almost end his life on these tapes, and ultimately the device exploding that costs him his leg and his military career. Later on, a professional documentary crew follow him on his voluntary return to the battlefield. Limping around on a false leg Fakhir is now tasked with making safe family homes in Mosul, that have been booby-trapped by fleeing ISIS fighters. The complexity here makes this endeavour even more perilous, with trip wires, pressure plates and other nefarious methods left for him to deal with, while also having to contend with overwork and his previous injury. His eventual demise is caught by the crew shadowing him. The only criticism I would have, is it is a rather opaque character study, in that the film doesnâ(TM)t make clear whether Fakhir is truly selflessly serving the public by making his city a safer place to live, or whether there is an element of thrill-seeking to it - his hometown residents have drawn their own conclusions though, and hang his picture in homes and businesses, in respect of his undeniably noble actions. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/21/23 Full Review Read all reviews
The Deminer

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Movie Info

Synopsis Armed only with his courage and some wire cutters, a Kurdish colonel disarms thousands of bombs.
Director
Shinwar Kamal, Hogir Hirori
Producer
Hogir Hirori, Antonio Russo Merenda
Screenwriter
Hogir Hirori
Genre
Documentary
Original Language
Kurdish
Runtime
1h 23m