After multiple delays White Bird is now finally in theaters and I was excited to see it last night. It is an incredibly moving story about the power of kindness that, unfortunately, is very relevant today. Julian Albans (Bryce Gheisar) is at a new school after being expelled for bullying a boy with a facial disfigurement. When he witnesses the bullying of another student he does nothing to intervene because, as he tells his visiting grandmother Sara (Helen Mirren), he just wants to keep his head down so he can fit in. This attitude worries Sara so she decides to tell him about her experiences as a Jewish girl in Nazi-occupied France during World War II in order to emphasize the need to take action against injustice. This framing device (a reference to Wonder) connects to flashbacks of a young Sara (Ariella Glaser) and her classmate Julien Beaumier (Orlando Schwerdt) as he helps her escape from a Nazi roundup of Jewish children and hides her in his family's barn with the knowledge of his parents (Gillian Anderson and Jo Stone-Fewings) despite great personal risk. I really love that Julien consciously makes the decision to be kind even though Sara and her friends ostracized him for having a crippled leg and that his kindness is an act of bravery with increasingly dangerous stakes because that is a very powerful message. I also love how the relationship between Julien and Sara is developed because I really cared about their characters and was totally invested in their fate (I cried several times). Helen Mirren and Gillian Anderson can always be relied upon to give outstanding performances but I was especially impressed by the two young leads. The cinematography is beautiful, especially the scenes where Julien and Sara use their imagination to figuratively escape from the barn, and the score, particularly a song the characters sing throughout, is haunting. I think everyone needs to see this movie to be inspired to be a light in a world of increasing darkness.
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