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John Truscott (Brendan Cowell) is a naive young British officer sent to a remote outpost in Sarawak. To learn the local Iban language and customs, he is assigned a "sleeping dictionary"—a local woman who serves as a translator, cultural guide, and sexual companion. His "dictionary" is Selima (Jessica Alba), a literate, strong-willed Iban woman who has been forced into this role by circumstance. Predictably, lessons in vocabulary turn into lessons in love.
Rating: ★★½☆☆☆
You are uncomfortable with narratives that soften historical sexual coercion in the name of "true love." sleeping dictionary movie
At first glance, The Sleeping Dictionary looks like a lush, sweeping epic in the tradition of The Painted Veil or Out of Africa . Set in 1930s Sarawak (British Borneo), the film boasts stunning jungle cinematography, intricate period costumes, and a magnetic young Jessica Alba. However, beneath its glossy surface lies a film deeply at war with itself—attempting to critique the very colonial and misogynistic dynamics it ultimately romanticizes. John Truscott (Brendan Cowell) is a naive young
The Painted Veil (2006), Anna and the King , or colonial-era romances where you have to squint past the politics. Predictably, lessons in vocabulary turn into lessons in love
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