Since 9/11, Muslims have basically become the N-words of the new millennium, being indiscriminately demonized in much the same way young African-Americans were universally vilified by the FBI during the rise of the Black Power Movement. And it this similar sort of predicament which is sensitively explored in Mooz-Lum, a coming-of-age flick by Qasim "Q" Basir.
Mr. Basir makes a memorable writing and directorial debut with this semi-autobiographical character-driven drama chronicling an emotionally-conflicted young Muslim's struggle for identity. And Q assembled an impressive cast to execute his script, including Evan Ross, Danny Glover, Nia Long and Roger Guenveur Smith, to name a few.
At the point of departure, we are introduced to Hassan Mahdi (Smith), an overbearing patriarch who forces his family to follow an orthodox, Islamic regimen. Wife Safiyah (Long) is unhappily-married because her husband's too strict on the kids. Still, she won't divorce him because she feels they need a father figure in their lives.
Consequently, their miserable son, Tariq (Ross), aka T, routinely removes the kufi he's supposed to wear, as soon as his dad drops him off at school. And he also has to hide the fact that he has an innocent crush on a Catholic girl (Molly Paddock) he met in the woods. Meanwhile, his sister, Taqua (Kimberley Drummond), has her own issues, having to keep her head and body covered in modest Muslim garb that makes her stand out like a sore thumb.
The plot thickens when T's faith is tested his freshman year of college, between being teased by a trash-talking classmate (Vladimi Versaillies) who lives across the hall and being attracted to a cute coed (Maryam Basir) who turns his head. On the one hand, he does his best to distance himself from his devout roommate, Hamza (Kunal Sharma), yet he's not really ready to behave like a party animal either.
Elsewhere at the university, a Muslim professor (Dorian Missick) is having his tenure subtly threatened by a dean (Glover) who doesn't appreciate his proselytizing. But then, all of the above is overshadowed by the events of 9/11 when an ugly mob starts roaming the campus in search of easy targets to take out their frustrations on.
A poignant, cinematic memoir of growing up Muslim in America from the perspective of an anguished soul who just wanted to enjoy a normal childhood.
Excellent(3.5 stars)
Rated PG-13 for violence and mature themes.
Running time: 95 Minutes
Distributor: Vivendi Entertainment
DVD Extras: None
To see a trailer for Mooz-Lum, visit:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V4axp5V_j6E
To order a copy of Mooz-Lumon DVD, visit: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B004OA684Y/ref=nosim/thslfofire-20