THE MAURITANIAN – Review by Martha K Baker

Only the first five minutes of The Mauritanian are easy to watch: a son says good night to his mother. The rest of The Mauritanian proves heart-peltingly painful to watch because it’s about torture visited by the United States on an innocent man, Mohamedou Ould Slahi.

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THE MAURITANIAN – Review by Leslie Combemale

So much star power should amount to a lot more than what audiences will get out of The Mauritanian. Thank the cinematic gods for Tahar Rahim, however, who is the film’s saving grace, bringing appropriate gravitas to his portrayal of Mohamedou Ould Slahi, the title role, around which all the mystery and tension of the story is centered. It is the story of his imprisonment in Guantanamo Bay, his years of torture and interrogation, and his fight to be freed. It is startling how much Rahim looks like his character’s real life counterpart, whose NY Times best-selling memoir, Guantanamo Diary, is the basis for the film.

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