Flee (2021) Hindi Dubbed (ORG) [Dual Audio] BluRay 1080p 720p 480p HD

Flee (2021) Hindi Dubbed (ORG) [Dual Audio] BluRay 1080p 720p 480p HD

                                          

                                           Flee (2021)

 Movie Name: Flee (2021)
 IMDb Rating: 8.0/10
 Quality: 480p | 720p | 1080p (BLURAY)
 Language: Hindi Dubbed | English (Dual Audio)
 Director: Jonas Poher Rasmussen Stars: Daniel Karimyar, Fardin Mijdzadeh, Milad Eskandari
 Genres: Animation | Biography | Drama | Documentary


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                                                        Flee 2021 Movie – Storyline :

 An animated documentary telling the true story about a man’s need to confront his past in order to truly have a future. Amin arrived as an unaccompanied minor in Denmark from Afghanistan. Today, at 36, he is a successful academic and is getting married to his long-time boyfriend. A secret he has been hiding for over 20 years threatens to ruin the life he has built for himself. For the first time, he is sharing his story with his close friend.  Review of Flee (2021 Movie): It makes a lot of sense. Standard documentary procedure has the participants or experts telling their perspective into the camera. This is tried and true because there’s real power in having people tell you their stories. It’s fundamental to sentient beings and is one of our distinguishing marks as humans. Still, this storytelling may not give one the sense of BEING there.  Animation – surprisingly – has the ability to do this. Because events can be recreated in exacting and stark details. And characters are no less human just because they’re drawn. It helps that we’re far past the time when anything animated is treated as cartoons and thus “kids stuff”. Several decades of shows like The Simpsons, Family Guy and South Park will do that.  From Afghanistan to Russia. From Russia to Copenhagen. From Copenhagen to Princeton and then back again. We follow the nomadic Amin who is often running for his very life. This movie isn’t inherently political but… But it does make the case for the refugee. It’s my perception that film lovers tend to be better at empathy and thus do not need to be convinced: “Hey, what refugees go through really sucks and what little nations can do to help should be done.” But there are many who need to hear and understand that message. I wonder if they’ll ever get the opportunity to see this film. Now that it’s a Sundance Winner… Maybe.