Nour El-Sherif

  • Ali Abdel-Khalek – El Ar AKA The Shame (1982)

    1981-1990Ali Abdel-KhalekDramaEgypt

    Plot:Abdul Tawab, a well-known trader travels to Alexandria to agree on a drug deal in which he pays his fortune.
    Upon his return he’s killed. The eldest son Kamal admits the truth behind the family’s wealth and everyone is faced with a difficult choice either completing the deal and getting the money, or rejecting it and losing the inheritance.Read More »

  • Said Marzouk – Zawgaty wal kalb AKA My Wife and the Dog (1971)

    1971-1980ArthouseDramaEgyptSaid Marzouk

    Quote:
    My Wife and the Dog is widely regarded as a landmark film, one that broke with established conventions of style and proposed a new approach to narrative structure and visual language. Painter and filmmaker Marzouk’s first fiction feature tells the story of a newlywed lighthouse attendant who leaves his wife behind on the mainland for months. In his solitude, memories of adulterous adventures from his bachelorhood obsess him to the point that he begins to suspect his wife. Evocative imagery and compelling performances from a cast of iconic Egyptian stars—including Soad Hosni, Mahmud Mursi, and Nour El-Sherif—lend the film a sweeping, emotional charge.Read More »

  • Ali Badr Khan – Al karnak AKA Karnak Café (1975)

    1971-1980Ali Badr KhanDramaEgyptPolitics

    In one of their best roles ever, distinguished actors Nour al Sherif and Saad Hosni star in this overwhelming movie which witnesses the unstable social and political life in Egypt during the late 60s and early 70s of the last century. The lives of a group of university students are turned upside down because of their talks about the political instability the country was going through at the time. While some of the students managed to recover, others have been doomed and fought for their lives. Based on the novel of the same name by Naguib Mahfouz!Read More »

  • Youssef Chahine – Al-Massir aka Destiny (1997)

    Drama1991-2000EgyptPhilosophyYoussef Chahine

    Ideas are imperishable, such is the premise of this powerful, upbeat allegory from one of Egypt’s most esteemed directors, Youssef Chahine. Ostensibly the true tale of revolutionary Muslim philosopher Averroes who lived in 12th-century Spain when Arabs ruled Anadulsia, it parallels the story of Chahine’s own experiences with Islamic fundamentalists when he released his 1994 film L’Emigre because it dared depict a sacred Muslim prophet. During that time, fundamentalists were not content to merely have the film banned, they also threatened Chahine’s life. Read More »

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