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The Beauty Academy of Kabul

December 13, 2009 by  
Filed under DVD

  • An arresting and optimistic portrait of post-Taliban Afghanistan, the theatrical hit The Beauty Academy of Kabul captures the wonderfully odd circumstances that bring Afghan and American women together in pursuit of physical beauty and much more. In this utterly unique film, a quirky gaggle of Western hairstylists, including Afghan-American women, armed with blow driers and designer scissors, impr

DescriptionAn arresting and optimistic portrait of post-Taliban Afghanistan, the theatrical hit THE BEAUTY ACADEMY OF KABUL captures the wonderfully odd circumstances that bring Afghan and American women together in pursuit of physical beauty and much more. In this utterly unique film, a quirky gaggle of Western hairstylists, including Afghan-American women, armed with blow driers and designer scissors, improbably opens a school to teach eager Afghan women the high art of fixing hair. . . . More >>

The Beauty Academy of Kabul

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5 Responses to “The Beauty Academy of Kabul”
  1. This short documentary works for me on several levels.

    Taking it at face value, an international group of hairdressers, American, British and Afghani establish a Beauty School in Kabul, to restore an institution which had been targeted for destruction and outlawed by the Taliban regime. It is a story which can be construed as amerikan imperialism, introducing a capitalistic, secular business in the capital city of Kabul a feat which is only possible because of the security of NATO troops in the city. However, it becomes clear from some of the cameos of the students that hairstyling and makeup were underground activities that many women were demanding even under the threat of beheadings and the more extreme punishments available under Sharia. Throughout the film there is the juxtaposition of images of beauty and sisterhood with those of armed men looking on with considerable bemusement.

    On another level though, the film raises as many questions as answers. One is struck by the admission of one refugee to America of her feelings of guilt after leaving her homeland, that she did nothing to help her abandoned Afghani “sisters” in the series of struggles which beset her native country. What sort of society did exist in Afghanistan before the Russian invasion? We know that there was some sort of monarchy which, following a coup, became some sort of republic. Did it meet the George Bush Jr. test of a democracy? Then came the Russian invasion and the establishment of the jihadist movement, finance and armed by the US and led by one Osama bin Laden. Did the CIA know or even suspect that this would lead to the establishment of a particular type of an Islamic Republic led by the Taliban?

    On a human level, it is clear from the level of interest of ordinary Afghan women that beauty and makeup are things that they are interested in but they must bow to the wishes of their husbands and families who may not approve of their use of make up or different hair styles. While not wishing to tread in or on the footsteps of feminists here, I for one, believe that it is an inalienable right of every person to have self-determination.

    This little film deserves much wider attention than it has received. I heartily recommend it to everyone.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  2. I had read the book written about the beauty school when it first came out and just got around to watching the documentary this weekend. I am so glad I made the effort and would recommend all westerners view this if possible.

    The Afghani women are incredible — the sacrifices they make to to attend the school and better themselves are unbelievable. Trying to go to school with children playing at your feet before going home to cook with none of luxuries of an American kitchen and a husband who doesn’t view it his role to help make be tired just watching it. The Americans that go into the school appear to have basically very good intentions and I applaud that they are willing to disrupt their lives to help others. That being said, there was a lot of “ugly” American in this film. They were largely arrogant, insensitive and disrepectful of the culture in which these women live. The students have come through war and poverty and one of the instructors reams them out for not being more foward-thinking in their hair color. What? Another instructor seems to be totally shocked and confused as to why these women seem to be afraid of their husbands. I just wanted to so “Hello — are all you Americans stupid ? Did you not spend some time before going there trying to understand the way these women live and the culture/laws of the country?”

    My one complaint is that I wish more time had been spent on the Afghani women’s stories. They were more interesting than the Americans but got less time focused on their lives.
    Rating: 4 / 5

  3. Maybird says:

    This documentary is a great look at a female community transforming itself after being lifted from an oppressive government that worked to keep women under wraps (literally) and out of the spotlight. The documentary, however, does focus mostly on the Western women who come to teach the Afghani students. The Americans come off as looking misinformed, but their good intentions ultimately make the documentary interesting. It would have been nice to see more from the Afghani women’s point of view. A documentary that I enjoyed more, and felt like really showed the progress made by Afghani women and also the trials they face regarding beauty and fashion choices, was Afghan Star. I saw an advance screening and watching the two female contestants compete on television in the Afghani version of American Idol was very eye-opening in terms of how far women’s right have come and also how far they still have to go. The Beauty Academy of Kabul is a great look, however, at the side of Afghanistan not covered on your local news. Check it out!
    Rating: 4 / 5

  4. In 2003 six American hairdressers opened a beauty school in the bombed out ruins of post-Taliban Kabul. Director Liz Mermin follows this venture from the grand opening and selection of the first class to the graduation dinner three months later. Two of the volunteers, Sima and Shaima, had emigrated from Afghanistan to the United States more than twenty years earlier, and their cultural reconnection is emotionally powerful. “It’s been twenty years since I was here,” observes Sima, “but the country has regressed a hundred years. ” Two other volunteers are positively obnoxious; they cannot understand why these Afghan women would not wear makeup, drive, or anger their husbands. One of them begins classes with yoga meditation as the Afghan women giggle. Another gushes that their project is not just about hair and makeup but about “healing the country. ” The real heroes that make this film worth watching, though, are the Afghan women. “Our men have backwards mentalities,” one of them laments. I found the symbolism of a beauty parlor run by culturally insensitive American do-gooders in a conservative Muslim country rich with paradox. Was this project one of genuine feminist liberation or self-congratulatory cultural imperialism? A little of both, I thought. In English and Afghan.
    Rating: 5 / 5

  5. This revealing and sometimes amusing documentary follows the efforts of several western women to open a beauty school in Kabul, Afghanistan, in the days following the fall of the Taliban regime. Here the feminist assumptions of the school’s instructors collide with the realities of life for women in a more traditional, male-dominated Islamic culture.

    The filmmakers have been invited into the homes of some of these women and we learn a great deal about their values and aspirations, as well as what is expected of them. When a young single woman reveals that she is “in love” with a young man, she makes the filmmaker promise not to tell her mother, who would strongly disapprove. A married woman speaks of living through the reign of Taliban terror that kept women house-bound, and another describes secretly working as a hairdresser during those years in her home – in defiance of the law. The beauty school instructors may make you cringe, but you’ll admire their students.
    Rating: 4 / 5

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