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- Cairo, March 17, 2003. The US-UK strike against Iraq is imminent. How can an Egyptian photographer, in his thirties, surpass his own disappointments & fears? How can he find an answer to the existential questions related to life, death, sex and logic amidst his awareness of all the absurdity around him? Can this artist remain alive (breathing, thinking, and photographing) surviving the oppressive atmosphere? Or is he going to collapse with the fall of Baghdad?
- From January 25 to May 27, 2011, the film tracks four months of the Egyptian revolution as seen through the director's eyes. January 25 is the beginning, but May 27 is not the end - because the revolution continues.
- This hopeful and heartbreaking film offers a unique perspective into the contemporary Iraqi mindset, a complex entanglement of hope, patriotism, pride, fear, anger, and frustration seen through the perspective of the Iraqi national soccer team. As the team trains at a camp in Jordan for the Gulf Cup tournament they are haunted with fear for their families back home and also hopeful despite an uncertain future
- "Emad" is an Egyptian man in his early forties who lives alone with his 13-year-old dog "Rola", and her health condition has clearly deteriorated recently. On his last visit to the doctor, he advised him to relieve Rola of her pain. Will Emad respond to the doctor's opinion?
- Although more than 3 years passed since the Egyptian Revolution , But Egyptian Copts still suffered from discrimination and Sectarianism.
- Though more than 30 years have passed since the death of Shadi Abdel Salam, Shadi's legacy is still under discussion, and as Shadi has done in his cinema to draw inspiration from history, we are trying, in turn, to rediscover Shadi.
- From exile to the homeland, a journey back with the memory through reality, for all the time that has been robbed and destroyed by the recent war in Syria. Ten years spent in Egypt by Syrian director Nour Halloum till her back home.