“The Long Goodbye” says a lot quickly
By Fareeha Molvi
(This post was originally published to Instagram on March 30, 2022)
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Emotional whiplash is the best way to describe Riz Ahmed’s Oscar-winning short film The Long Goodbye, co-created with Aneil Karia. This tiny but mighty film opens on a familiar scene of a British Muslim household buzzing around in exuberant excitement as they prepare for a dholki (pre-wedding) party. Beautiful in its normalcy, we watch as a typical brown family is chilling and bickering together in a modest home. Minutes later we are served a gut-punch, as the film visualizes the community’s worst nightmare. I couldn’t breathe watching the scenes of his family and other brown bodies being brutalized by Islamophobic violence.
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Ahmed and Karia said the second part was inspired by the rising intolerance and hateful rhetoric that has become commonplace in a post-Brexit UK. The scene is a haunting, fictional imagining of the worst-case scenario. The abrupt shift in tone from everyday happiness to jarring violence is meant to be a metaphor – comparing the UK’s relationship with immigrants to that of an abusive relationship.
Visually, the short has a dream-like quality, almost like watching a music video – which makes sense given Ahmed’s musical chops. At the end he recites “Where You From” a spoken word track off his album, also titled “The Long Goodbye.”
I’m in awe that this film won the Oscar for live action short film, a historic first in this category. Watch the film below:
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