Go Home
Go Home
| 12 October 2016 (USA)
Go Home Trailers

Nada is going home. Or at least she wants to. When she comes back to Lebanon, she realizes she's a foreigner in her own country. But there's still a place she calls home: an abandoned house in ruins, haunted by the presence of her grandfather who disappeared mysteriously during the civil war. Something happened in this house. Something violent. A young woman searching for the truth and discovering herself.

Reviews
Incannerax

What a waste of my time!!!

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Iseerphia

All that we are seeing on the screen is happening with real people, real action sequences in the background, forcing the eye to watch as if we were there.

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Catangro

After playing with our expectations, this turns out to be a very different sort of film.

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Joanna Mccarty

Amazing worth wacthing. So good. Biased but well made with many good points.

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Georges Nahas

Go Home is another outstanding Lebanese movie! Directed by Johane Chouaib the movie handles the horrific details of the civil war through the eyes of a young Lebanese emigrant played by the Iranian actress Golshifteh Farahani! She gave a mesmerizing performance with the collaboration of Julia Kassar whose always in the right movies! Suspenseful and scary sometimes it's really a step forward in our local production of art house cinema!

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ratcityfilmsociety

This is a much better film than I thought it would be, and I came in with high expectations. First of all: don't worry about an Irani playing an Arab, it works. It really works. Golshifteh Farahani is a stunning beauty and an even better actress, her performance in this film is one for the ages. This is a much more universal film than its simple setting in a Lebanese village. Complex and multi-layered; touching upon immigration, the inconsistencies of memory as well as the longer term effects of a civil war on all that came under its sway. It was nice to find out that my favorite moment in the film was the director's as well. I suspect that a number of friends who were also in attendance are wondering if we saw the same film, we likely didn't. Those who get the immense sadness of the title (which is absolutely brilliant, something I almost never say about a title), please find a way to see this film. There are heartbreaking and painful parts; but there is "that moment", one of those that make film my favorite art form.

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