The Sin (1965 film)

The Sin (Arabic: الحرام, translit. Al Haram listen ) is a classical 1965 Egyptian drama film directed by Henry Barakat. The film stars Faten Hamama, Zaki Rostom, and Abdullah Gaith and is based on a novel by the same title by Yūsuf Idrīs. The film was nominated for the Prix International award at the 1965 Cannes Film Festival.[1] It was also chosen as one of the best Egyptian film productions in the Egyptian cinema centennial. A survey by Al-Fonoon magazine in 1984 chose it as one of the best ten films in the history of Egyptian cinema.

The Sin
Directed byHenry Barakat
Written byYoussef Idriss
Saad al-Din Wahbah
StarringFaten Hamama
Zaki Rostom
Abdullah Gaith
Distributed byColumbia Pictures
Release date
1965 (Egypt)
March 11, 1974 (USA)
Running time
105 minutes
CountryEgypt
LanguageArabic

Plot

Fatin Hamama in The Sin

Azizah, a poor peasant, portrays worker oppression in this somber social drama. She gets savagely raped by a guard when she goes into the fields to gather potatoes. She does not reveal what had happened to her husband who is suffering from an illness. She conceals the pregnancy and throttles the baby after it is born. She also dies soon thereafter. The migrant workers rally around her memory as she becomes a martyr to the cause of the struggling peasants.

The newspaper Le Monde wrote: "we have been attracted to this film due to the true picture that reflects the suffering of this village, the picture is not about a problem for one individual, it’s about the reflection of everything surrounding her, from people to culture."

Cast

gollark: Maybe a bunch of seriesed high discharge lithium batteries? That CANNOT go wrong.
gollark: But those are low voltage.
gollark: Further evidence of ABR prescience.
gollark: The power of filter bubbles is immensely powerful.
gollark: They're really making assumptions about how many people you know and how diversely distributed they are.

References

  1. "Festival de Cannes: Al Haram". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-03-04.


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