Film audiences may flock to The Good Lie, a compelling drama because Reese Witherspoon is one of the stars, but they will fall in love with Arnold Oceng, Ger Duany, rapper Emmanuel Jal, and Kuoth Wiel; the story, about the lost boys and girls of Sudan during the terrible reign of war lords, The Good Lie is about their experience. As children their characters had to flee their homeland, walking thousands of miles to the Kakuma refugee camp in Kenya. The dangerous African terrain is gorgeously shot under Philippe Falardeau’s fine direction. After 13 years, the orphans come to the United States, among the last to make that journey before 9/11 closed down those doors and possibilities for emigration. Once here, the boys need to find jobs, and learn our ways one electric light switch at a time, and that’s where Reese Witherspoon comes in to help with the transition. The Good Lie, a seeming oxymoron, takes its title from a dilemma solved by Huck Finn in saving Jim in Mark Twain’s classic, as Mamere (Oceng) learns from a literature class to adapt to American culture. The Good Lie speaks to a brave, resonant heroic act that reveals his character’s essential decency.
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