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Traumatized Ugandan youths from the war-torn northern part of the country express themselves through dance in the documentary "War/Dance."
Traumatized Ugandan youths from the war-torn northern part of the country express themselves through dance in the documentary “War/Dance.”
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Husband-and-wife filmmakers Sean and Andrea Nix Fine break a lot of rules in “War/Dance” that good documentarians probably shouldn’t.

The Uganda-set film goes for all kinds of lovely, “Out of Africa”-style visuals and snazzy editing effects.

***1/2 RATING | Documentary

When their main subjects — adolescents who have either seen their relatives killed or been forced to commit murder themselves by the insane Lord’s Resistance Army rebel movement — describe their trauma, they sometimes sound a little too rehearsed (or not enough), even in their tribal language. Certain scenes are impressionistically restaged versions of earlier events, usually with atmospheric conditions chosen to enhance the desired mood.

But you know what? Who cares? The core of this week’s African catastrophe documentary is so simultaneously heartbreaking and uplifting, you only want to thank the Fines for making it as engaging as they have.

Not to denigrate African documentaries that only focus on awfulness or dry statistics or nervous-laugh culture shock, but entertaining while never losing sight of the human and political issues that define its subjects’ lives certainly feels like the best way to make us really care.

And say what you will about African kids singing and dancing, the movie leaves no doubt that through connecting with their traditional art forms, these abused children gain purpose, pride and precious joy. As one of them puts it, the rest of the world sees Africa mainly for its problems. We can’t calculate how much it means to these young people to show us another side of their lives.

The film charts preparations at the vast, dangerous Patongo refugee camp in the war-plagued Ugandan north to compete, for the first time, in the big National Music Competition in Kampala. Schools from all across Uganda, many from much safer and wealthier districts, vie for the national honors in the capital, and the displaced Acholi kids from Patongo know they’ll be looked down upon not only for having nothing but for reminding their countrymen of the troubles up north.

So they practice hard to be the best they can. And it’s wonderful to watch a former boy soldier like Dominic, 14, come to master his homemade xylophone.

But it’s equally important to follow dancer Nancy, also 14 and self-controlled beyond her years because she has to do most of the caring for her younger siblings, to a very dark place: her murdered father’s grave out in the bush, where she breaks down and is able, briefly, to cry like the child she still is.

What these kids have to live with is beyond horrible. The music and dancing is great. (If it hadn’t been, the film would still get points for good intentions.)

“War/Dance” finds an excellent balance between dark and light. While the Fines make it as aesthetically and emotionally pleasing as they can, they don’t seem to have sacrificed much in the way of reality.

“War/Dance”

PG-13 for violence, language, children in jeopardy. 1 hour, 45 minutes. In English and Acholi with English subtitles. Opens today at the Starz FilmCenter

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