There is a Man in our House

There Is a Man in Our House or A Man in Our House (Arabic: في بيتِنا رَجِل Fi baitina rajul), is a 1961 Egyptian drama, history, romance film directed by Henry Barakat, an Egyptian film director of Lebanese origin.[1][2] The film is based on a novel by an Egyptian writer, Ihsan Abdel Quddous,[3][4] and stars Omar Sharif.[5]

There is a Man in Our House
في بيتِنا رَجِل
Directed byHenry Barakat
Written byIhsan Abdel Quddous(novel), Yussef Issa (adaptation)
StarringOmar Sharif
Rushdy Abaza
Zahret El-Ola
Hussein Riad
Zubaida Tharwat
Hassan Youssef
Edited byFathy Kassem
Release date
8 April 1964
Running time
159 minutes
CountryEgypt
LanguageArabic

Plot

Ibrahim is a young radical leader who lost his brother during a student demonstration that turned out to be very violent when the police decided to get involved and started to shoot anyone in their way. Unfortunately, Ibrahim's brother, a young smart boy, was shot to death in front of Ibrahim. When Ibrahim sees this, he plans to murder the prime minister as revenge, and he succeeds. After murdering the Prime Minister, Ibrahim seeks to hide in his friend's house, as he had no other choice whatsoever because the authorities were pursuing him. His presence in the house endangered the whole family because none of them had any criminal record nor any political activities. They were a simple middle-class family trying to stay away from such problems. Although his friend's parents were very peaceful and wanted to stay away from problems, they couldn’t resist helping Ibrahim. When Ibrahim entered the house and explained to his friend's family what had happened, they accepted to hide him in their house till a solution could be found. The film then wanders through much hand wringing because both men blame themselves for jeopardizing the companion's parents, sisters, and a detested cousin. A sentiment between Ibrahim and the younger sister turns into a noteworthy sub-plot. As days pass by Ibrahim falls in love with her and decides to stay in Egypt instead of running away to Europe. This caused them a lot of problems for two reasons: The first one is that they were both from Muslim families and thus it was not easy for them to show their love openly. Second, Ibrahim was conflicted between love and militancy. Eventually, he chooses to be among the resistance fighters and ends by blowing up an ammunition cache and himself in the process.

Cast

gollark: It's fine as long as you don't do stupid/accursed/traditionally-mola things.
gollark: I doubt this.
gollark: And whatever framework it's using can't just serve static files conveniently?
gollark: I have a "useful" "production" "application" using Express.
gollark: I would recommend just using express or something. It works fine.

References

  1. Fi Baitina Rajul at Manchester School of Arts, Language and Culture 's film catalogue. Retrieved on 20 July 2016.
  2. Egypt’s revolutions on film at bfi.org.uk Retrieved on 20 July 2016.
  3. Man In Our House, A (Fi Baitina Rajul) Retrieved on 20 July 2016.
  4. Peter Schepelern (2010). Filmleksikon (in Danish). Gyldendal A/S. pp. 778–. ISBN 978-87-02-04523-9.
  5. Nonie Darwish (16 November 2006). Now They Call Me Infidel: Why I Renounced Jihad for America, Israel, and the War on Terror. Penguin Publishing Group. pp. 53–. ISBN 978-1-101-21785-6. Sharif starred in great classic Egyptian movies, such as Fi Baitina Rajul. But he later skyrocketed to international fame when he won roles in Lawrence of Arabia and then Doctor Zhivago. However, when he played opposite Barbra Streisand in ...
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.