Wendy Ide 

Shabu review – charming documentary follows a Dutch teenager learning about life

A young aspiring Rotterdam rapper having a bad summer is the charismatic subject of Shamira Raphaëla’s affecting film
  
  

Shabu and friend relaxing in inflatable pink hearts in a pool
The ‘irrepressible’: Shabu Abisoina, right, with girlfriend Stephany. Photograph: Publicity image

Fourteen-year-old Shabu has crashed his grandmother’s car and finds himself in the dog house with his extended family in Peperklip, a housing complex in Rotterdam. He must put aside his dreams of musical stardom and his budding romance with Stephany, and work to pay off his debt over the summer.

A kid grudgingly selling homemade popsicles on the street is not the most obvious choice for a documentary subject, but in the irrepressible Shabu, Shamira Raphaëla’s charming film finds an immensely likable and charismatic subject. The film skates in the grey area between factual and fiction film-making, but Shabu’s coming of age and growth as a human being is persuasive, affecting and authentic.

Watch a trailer for Shabu.
 

Leave a Comment

Required fields are marked *

*

*