Parents' Guide to

Wadjda

By Sandie Angulo Chen, Common Sense Media Reviewer

age 9+

Beautiful, nuanced tale of an independent Saudi girl.

Movie PG 2013 98 minutes
Wadjda Poster Image

A Lot or a Little?

What you will—and won't—find in this movie.

Community Reviews

age 9+

Based on 6 parent reviews

age 9+

Beautiful, wonderful, and funny!

A terrific film from a little filmed location of the world. It subtly states a variety of positions. What are your options when you are confined into a small box and have grown out of it the moment you were placed in it. The complications of getting to work everyday, how to perform yourself, your gender, your desires and your entrepreneurial spirit all collide in this 90 minute masterpiece.
age 9+

A rare window

We LOVED this movie. It is complex and PAINFUL at times to watch the oppression of women and girls but eye-opening and empowering at the same time. The "too much sex" mark is because it will bring up LOTS of sexuality-related opportunities for tough cultural conversation

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (6 ):
Kids say (4 ):

The first Saudi Arabian-produced film ever to be directed by a woman, Haifaa Al-Mansour, is a triumph of nuance and substance. Enterprising young Wadjda -- with her love of Western radio, quirky Chucks with purple laces, and singular decision to beat Abdullah in a bike race -- is a study in everyday female empowerment. When her mother informs her that her father's family tree can never include her, because it only features men's names, she boldly writes "Wadjda" on a sticky note and tacks it on to the painting. The moment is both touching and a loaded statement -- her father's "glorious" legacy will never claim her.

Wadjda knows what her future holds. She must marry (one of her more pious classmates is already a wife) and bear her husband's sons -- something that her own beautiful mother was unable to do. But that's another story, because Wadjda is about independent thinking, overcoming odds, and unconditional friendship. Abdullah and Wadjda don't create a fictional world like Terabithia, but in their own way, they talk and play and compete like equals -- something just as secret and magical (and dangerous), given their homeland.

Movie Details

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