Film festivals London Film Festival 2019

Waiting for the Barbarians

London Film Festival 2019: Waiting for the Barbarians | Review
Public screenings
6th October 2019 8.40pm at BFI Southbank (NFT)
7th October 2019 12.30pm at
9th October 2019 6.10pm at Empire Haymarket

Ciro Guerra’s Waiting for the Barbarians is a new departure for the director. His first picture in English, it is adapted from the novel of the same name by J M Coetzee. The movie, visually arresting and meditative in tone, takes us through Coetzee’s tale of colonial violence and prejudice as though it were a strange land bristling with hidden dangers.

We open in an unnamed country, the furthest frontier of a powerful empire. Mark Rylance, as the film’s protagonist, the Magistrate, quietly performs his colonial duties in a fortress town, the only Westerner among local farmers. The arrival of Colonel Joll (Johnny Depp, complete with menacing sunglasses) spells the end of the Magistrate’s scholarly comfort: Joll, along with his brutal sidekick Officer Mandel (a rather uncomfortable Robert Pattinson), is there to subjugate the indigenous “barbarians” beyond the fortress walls. The Magistrate finds himself fighting a one-man battle against his own side when he attempts to help the Girl (Gana Bayarsaikhan), an indigenous woman who has suffered mutilation and displacement at Joll’s hands.

Rylance treads round the town like a medieval saint, his eyes raised to the skies or lowered to his books in a kind of perpetual benign wisdom. Guerra milks the religious parallels – at one point the Magistrate washes the Girl’s feet as if imitating Christ, and his fortitude under torture in the film’s harrowing climax has distinctly holy overtones. His subdued style suits Guerra’s restrained direction. Depp, too, adapts well to the film’s subtlety, and Bayarsaikhan turns in a magnetic performance as the enigmatic Girl.

In general, Guerra seems more assured when he is dealing with visuals than with dialogue. It doesn’t help that Coetzee adapted the script himself – each speech has a kind of portentous brevity that feels novelistic rather than cinematic. But the cinematography bears much of the film’s emotional weight, as Guerra brings his assured eye to bear on his actors’ expressive faces, or huge mountain ranges that recall 2009’s The Wind Journeys. A furious sandstorm is a moment of especial magnificence.

The Magistrate’s archaeological finds – a series of inscribed tablets – become repurposed later as faux-arcane messages about the state of the empire in the present day. It is a telling moment; history can serve just as well to illuminate the present as the past. Waiting for the Barbarians is a chilling indictment of the “them vs. us” mentality that drives acts of unspeakable cruelty in the cause of colonial subjugation. It is a poignant dive into the dynamics of alienation and connection between oppressors and the oppressed.

Malin Hay

Waiting for the Barbarians does not have a UK release date yet.

Read more reviews and interviews from our London Film Festival 2019 coverage here.

For further information about the festival visit the official BFI website here.

More in Film festivals

Red Sea International Film Festival 2025: Giant

Laura Della Corte

“It’s really complicated. It’s really hard if you put yourself in his shoes”: Nawaf Al Dhufairi, Raghad Bokhari and Lana Komsany on Hijra at Red Sea International Film Festival 2025

Laura Della Corte

“Why didn’t I raise my voice for the Rohingya people?”: Akio Fujimoto on Lost Land at Red Sea International Film Festival 2025

Laura Della Corte

“When you live with someone with a harsh mental illness, you can really sink with them”: Zain Duraie and Alaa Alasad on Sink at Red Sea International Film Festival 2025

Laura Della Corte

“It felt quite absurd to be part of that social jungle”: Sara Balghonaim on Irtizaz at Red Sea International Film Festival 2025

Laura Della Corte

Red Sea International Film Festival 2025: Highlights and interviews with Juliette Binoche, Shigeru Umebayashi, Sir Anthony Hopkins, Idris Elba, and More

Laura Della Corte

“All that matters, I think, is the partnership”: Amira Diab on Wedding Rehearsal at Red Sea International Film Festival 2025

Laura Della Corte

“Modern love – it’s a bit dark”: Anas Ba Tahaf and Sarah Taibah on A Matter of Life and Death at Red Sea International Film Festival 2025

Laura Della Corte

“I believe inside each human being there is an artist”: Mohamed Jabarah Al-Daradji, Hussein Raad Zuwayr and Samar Kazem Jawad on Irkalla – Gilgamesh Dream

Laura Della Corte