";s:4:"text";s:5897:" Netflix Netflix. As a current interrogation of that crises, it comes up a bit short.Interviews with leading film and TV creators about their process and craft.Get The Latest IndieWire Alerts And Newsletters Delivered Directly To Your Inbox )Ameer (played with convincing passion by Fayssal Bazzi) is the only person of color in the main cast. But in 2020, audiences are all too familiar with the regular mistreatment of immigrants; they don’t need a Trojan Horse to identify with people who spend years, not months, in cages, and Rau’s story isn’t chosen because it’s the best representation for what displaced people go through. (That, apparently, includes another stereotypical reporter-source relationship, though the series does hold back for a while. In It’s worth noting that while Rau’s case brought scrutiny to Australia’s treatment of undocumented immigrants, it did not change the fundamental bent of the country’s refugee policies. (Yvonne Strahovski plays Sofie Werner, who’s based on Rau.) When A grim view inside an Australian detention center in the mid-2000s, inspired by true events.From the awards race to the box office, with everything in between: get the entertainment industry's must-read newsletter. Six episodes (all screened for review).
She’s trying to keep the public from knowing what she already knows, but as a pure-hearted reporter living at the hotel room next door constantly reminds her, Claire doesn’t have to follow orders. But while Stateless debuted on Australian broadcaster ABC.
Fights break out. The six episodes are well-performed, well-made, and well-intentioned, but by focusing on one well-off, white victim — as well as many more white characters — “Stateless” is consumed by an extraordinary exception instead of confronting the ongoing disenfranchisement toward displaced detainees.“Stateless” picks up with Sofie sprinting through the desert.
For 10 months, from 2004 to 2005, a mentally ill Australian citizen named Rau was not mentally fit enough to realize it, but when she forfeited her Australian identity, she forfeited The case became a public relations nightmare for DIMIA, leading to scrutiny that it had previously repelled with ease—due in no small part to the fact that Rau was a white Australian woman.
To its credit, “Stateless” doesn’t tease out that question like a mystery, but the answers still prove too outrageous to ignore — and too distracting from the series’ ultimate focus. As a true story that touches on a worldwide crisis, “Stateless” does its job. 2020 TV-MA 1 Season TV Shows. As politics professor and author The proceedings play out a little like prestige TV mad libs: four main characters, from very different life circumstances, who will be horribly altered and deeply affected by the punishing grind of an inhumane system. Asylum-seekers are stranded for years, if not decades.
Suddenly, the persecution of asylum-seekers wasn’t a problem for “outsiders”; it was a problem for everyone.“Stateless” tries to reignite that same urgent response by replicating the same story, this time as a scripted narrative, expanded to feature a talented ensemble. Overall, Stateless is a poignant and reflective reminder of just how serious a problem immigration is worldwide. Jai Courtney (“A Good Day to Die Hard”) plays Cam, a mechanic, husband, and father who’s lured to taking a position on the detention center’s security team by the hefty paychecks. OK… well… maybe she just The other plotlines, while affecting, are pretty predictable. UNLIMITED TV SHOWS & MOVIES.
Stateless: Review der Pilotepisode Auf Netflix ist eine namhaft besetzte Serie namens Stateless gestartet, die eine überaus aktuelle und tragische Thematik behandelt: Flüchtlinge. Creators: Cate Blanchett, Elise McCredie, Tony Ayres. To quote what I said in the finale recap and review, it’s a show that acts as a poignant, harsh reminder that under this glossy facade of “everything’s fine” is a world where very few things are. (Strahovski also helps, committing to every one of Sofie’s beliefs, no matter how misguided.
Before her death-defying jog through the outback, Sofie was a flight attendant and aspiring dancer. When Aussies learned that one of their own had been mistakenly detained in 2005, it drew massive and much-needed attention to a cruel and deeply flawed immigration system. Children are separated from their parents. As Manne outlined, Rau’s incarceration drew scrutiny precisely because of her race and nationality. Sofie is defined by too many facets to succinctly rattle off, which helps make her unique and compelling. Plagued by poverty, misfortune, and a system that betrays his best intentions at every turn, Ameer’s story is both the most affecting and the least internalized. The series recalls Netflix's landmark show But the show’s emphasis on Sofie—and in particular, the cult she was involved with—seems to come at the expense of its desire to shed light on Australian immigration.