Egyptian Story, an (1982) Egypt
Egyptian Story, an Image Cover
Additional Images
Director:Chahine, Youssef, El-Sherif, Nour, Mehrez, Ahmed, Mohieddin, Mohsen, Mounir, Mohamed, Nadir, Oussama
Studio:MISR International Films
Writer:Youssef Chahine
Rating:6.7 (166 votes)
Date Added:2012-06-05
ASIN:072091752342
Genre:Arabic films
IMDb:0084042
Duration:2:07:00
Sound:Mono
Languages:Arabic
Subtitles:English
LAC code:300001035
DVD or VHS:DVD
Original:original
Chahine, Youssef, El-Sherif, Nour, Mehrez, Ahmed, Mohieddin, Mohsen, Mounir, Mohamed, Nadir, Oussama  ...  (Director)
Youssef Chahine  ...  (Writer)
 
Oussama Nadir  ...  Yehia as Child
Mohsen Mohieddin  ...  Yehia as Young Man
Nour El-Sherif  ...  Yehia
Ahmed Mehrez  ...  
Mohamed Mounir  ...  
Ragaa Hussein  ...  
Seif El Dine  ...  
Youssra  ...  Amal
Hanan  ...  Nadia child
Leila Hamada  ...  Nadia young girl
Magda El-Khatib  ...  Nadia
Raga El Geddaoui  ...  
Soheir El Monasterli  ...  
Andrew Dinwoodie  ...  
Abdel Hadi Anwar  ...  
Comments: DME 100

Summary: The second of Youssef Chahine's autobiographical Alexandria Trilogy takes place largely in the mind of Chahine's cinematic alter ego, Yehia Mourad (Nour El Cherif), or, to be more accurate, his torso. Rushed into emergency open-heart surgery after an on-set heart attack, Yehia is put through a fantasy trial in a courtroom situated in his rib cage (a rather theatrical-looking contraption of white sheets draped over wooden ribs) as he flashes back on his life. Chahine embraces the absurdity of the silly device with fanciful fun (his inner child rebels against the stodgy grownup by crawling through his veins and undoing the surgery) but it's the flashbacks that carry the film's power. Think of it as Chahine's All That Jazz, only less flashy and more thoughtful. The young director struggles within the industry, sacrificing his vision and his politics in commercial compromises, sacrificing his family for his art, still dreaming of Hollywood while toiling in the low-budget environs of Egypt.Fans of Chahine will recognize startling re-creations of two of his most famous films, Cairo Station and The Sparrow, but you don't need to know his work to feel the strain of his conflicts. Inspired by his real-life bypass surgery and the self reassessment it triggered, Chahine is more critical than you might expect; he forgives himself his sins, naturally, but never quite lets himself off the hook. Followed by Alexandria Again and Forever, which stars Chahine himself as Yehia. --Sean Axmaker