The film’s devastating climax occurs in the Taliban-run stadium. After being discovered, Osama is sentenced to be married to an elderly, bearded mullah. The final shot is a long take of a burqa being placed over her head. Unlike the opening’s collective anonymity, this is a singular burial. Barmak holds the shot until the blue fabric becomes a shroud. The film thus argues that theocracy does not simply repress women; it performs a ritualistic necropolitics—turning the living into ghosts before they die.
To understand Osama , one must separate the film from its titular namesake. The protagonist, a twelve-year-old girl (played by non-professional actress Marina Golbahari), is never named. After her father is killed and her uncle dies in the Soviet-Afghan war, her mother (Zubaida Sahar) is left without a mahram (male guardian). Under Taliban law, she cannot work. Facing starvation, the mother cuts her daughter’s hair and renames her “Osama” (a male name, though the film plays on the ironic terror of the name’s global connotation). osama 2003 film
Beyond the Veil: The Politics of Erasure and Resistance in Siddiq Barmak’s Osama (2003) The film’s devastating climax occurs in the Taliban-run
Released in 2003, at the dawn of the post-9/11 reconstruction narrative, Siddiq Barmak’s Osama stands as a haunting cinematic artifact. As the first feature film fully produced in Afghanistan after the fall of the Taliban regime, it carries a weight beyond its 83-minute runtime. The film is not merely a drama about a girl masquerading as a boy; it is a raw, neorealist indictment of the Taliban’s gendered violence and a tragic exploration of what feminist theorist Veena Das calls "the pain of the other." This paper argues that Osama functions on two levels: first, as a documentary-like chronicle of the erasure of women from public life under Taliban decree; and second, as a universal allegory for the collapse of identity when forced into perpetual performance. Unlike the opening’s collective anonymity, this is a
Barmak employs a stark visual grammar. The camera often shoots from a child’s eye level, trapping the viewer in the claustrophobia of the burqa or the narrow alleys of Kabul. The color palette is desaturated—browns, grays, and dusty blues dominate—mirroring the spiritual and physical dessication of life under the Islamic Emirate. There is no score; only the ambient sounds of wind, prayer calls, and the metallic clang of a bicycle chain, which Barmak uses as a rhythmic motif of captivity.
The film critiques the Western gaze by refusing the "rescue narrative." When a well-meaning international aid worker briefly appears, she is powerless. The only Afghan male who shows kindness—a sympathetic mullah (Mohamad Haref Harati)—is ultimately silenced. This rejection of a happy ending is Barmak’s most potent political statement: there was no external savior for these women.
The burqa is the film’s central visual metaphor. In the opening sequence, Osama and her mother walk through a burqa-clad crowd, appearing as a moving architecture of blue grids. Barmak films the world from inside the burqa’s mesh: a fragmented, gridded, suffocating reality. When Osama removes the burqa to become "Osama" (the boy), she experiences a terrifying freedom—the ability to see the sun and run—but at the cost of her name, her gender, and eventually, her body.