The weak sports drama receives a healthy development in “rules of rules”, a film that relies on the experiences of the first team of competitive robots in Afghanistan. This is a story about the first male: Roya Mahabu, who led a student initiative, is the first woman to have a technical company in Afghanistan. Director Bill Guttage and representatives get a spirit that can be essentially, as well as societal assessments that make such a special impressive perseverance, but it is also a story that could have been listed with more access and ingenuity.
In the movie, Roya (Nikohl Boosheri) Afghan dreams, which is a group of schools from the Herat: Esin (Amber Afzali), Taara (Nina Hoseinzadeh), Haadiya (Sara Malal Rowe) and Arezo (Mariam Saraj). With Roya Ali’s brother (Noren Golalgaus) as a coach, the team is heading to a series of setbacks and hacking. Access to the first match, in Washington, includes a large bureaucratic red tape that leaves them a short window that is ridiculed to build their robot. Their difficult journey becomes international news.
In the homeland, the fame of girls draws the wrath of the Taliban. Unprecedented threats and threats, and they continue to return to the competition circuit that was captured in the montage that is fueled by music and who feels as if he chased from those who are obsessed with science, with a high-level shift from Phoebe Waller-Bridge as a judge and judge of the event.
But behind the festive energy is more urgent: teenagers’ commitment to cooperation and interconnection in a world often determined by war, and in the issue of Afghanistan, a long history of occupation. At most of the film, Afghan dreamers explain the detection of the land mine that they built, and an anticipation of horror to live in a place full of uninterrupted ammunition. A girl in the Vietnamese team listens. “My country is also,” she says.
Rules of rules
PG classification. Running time: 2 hours. In theaters.
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