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Review | The Monk and the Gun movie review: Bhutan drama is a one-of-a kind political satire

  • Hilarious political satire The Monk and the Gun follows a mock election held in Bhutan as the kingdom moves towards democracy

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(From left) Harry Einhorn, Tandin Sonam and Tandin Wangchuk in a still from The Monk and the Gun (category I, Dzongkha), directed by Pawo Choyning Dorji.

4/5 stars

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In 2006 the isolated, landlocked Kingdom of Bhutan took its first tentative steps towards democracy, just a few years after finally allowing access to television and the internet.

King Jigme Singye Wangchuck announced that he was abdicating the throne and transferred all his powers to a democratically elected government, in a critical step towards his country’s modernisation.

The Monk and the Gun, from writer-director Pawo Choyning Dorji, unspools in the aftermath of the king’s announcement, as a mock election is organised to educate the kingdom’s scattered population of around 750,000 about how to vote.

What emerges is a delightful comedy set in the lush foothills of the Himalayas that contemplates the importance of universal suffrage when weighed against everyday concerns such as religion, family, and communal contentment.

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After hearing about the mock elections, the lama of a small mountain village orders his attendant Tashi (Tandin Wangchuk) to acquire some firearms. Uncertain of his master’s intentions, Tashi sets out in search of weapons, knowing only that he must return in time for the lama’s full moon ceremony.

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