Flee Poster

Flee (2021)

PG-13 Jun 17, 2021 Documentary, Animation 1h 29m
78%
User Score
7.9/10
98%
91/100

Sometimes it takes years to start living your life

Overview

Recounted mostly through animation to protect his identity, Amin looks back over his past as a child refugee from Afghanistan as he grapples with a secret he’s kept hidden for 20 years.

Jonas Poher Rasmussen
Director

Top Billed Cast

Full Cast & Crew

Media

‘Flee’ Writer/Director Jonas Poher Rasmussen Breaks Down a Scene | 94th Oscars
‘Flee’ Writer/Director Jonas Poher Rasmussen Breaks Down a Scene | 94th Oscars
Featurette
Flee Q&A | BFI London Film Festival 2021
Flee Q&A | BFI London Film Festival 2021
Featurette
FLEE Interview | Riz Ahmed
FLEE Interview | Riz Ahmed
Featurette
FLEE Interview | Jonas Poher Rasmussen
FLEE Interview | Jonas Poher Rasmussen
Featurette
Official UK Trailer 2
Official UK Trailer 2
Trailer
Official Trailer
Official Trailer
Trailer
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Reviews

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A review by Louisa Moore - Screen Zealots
Written on March 9, 2021

Everybody has a story that deserves to be told, and an Afghan refugee’s personal narrative of oppression and the pursuit of a better life is portrayed in “Flee.” Director Jonas Poher Rasmussen animates a discussion between himself and his anonymous friend “Amin,” a man that has had one hell of an existence. Amin recounts his dramatic story through his own words, beginning when he was a young boy in Afghanistan in the 1980s to his incredible journey that made him the man he is today.

The hand-drawn animation is a poetic way to not only tell the man’s story, but to protect his identity. Amin’s life, of which most of it has been spent on the run, is recounted in a series of unbelievable events that are traumatic, heartbreaking, and inspiring. That all of these things happened...

Read the full review on TMDb
A review by badelf
Written on August 2, 2022

I loved **EVERYTHING** about this film. Jonas Rasmussen apparently is best friends with Amin, who just happens to be a Afghani who had to escape during Afghanistan's civil war because his father was one of the "_desaparecidos_" (to borrow the Chilean term of those silently murdered during Pinochet's rule).

Sounds ordinary? But oh no it isn't.

Now in his mid-30s, living in Denmark, gay, and having a boyfriend who wants to get married, Amin realizes that to have any quality of life, he must confront his past, and the horrible secret he's kept for most of his life. This film is the result.

As if that weren't different enough, Rasmussen animates most of the film in order to protect the actors from the Taliban. Why? Because this is a documentary and a true story....

Read the full review on TMDb
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