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7.4/10
5.8 k
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Explora el funcionamiento interno de la familia de Sadam Husein y su relación con sus asesores más cercanos.Explora el funcionamiento interno de la familia de Sadam Husein y su relación con sus asesores más cercanos.Explora el funcionamiento interno de la familia de Sadam Husein y su relación con sus asesores más cercanos.
- Ganó 1 premio Primetime Emmy
- 4 premios ganados y 18 nominaciones en total
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Opiniones destacadas
Truly chilling dramatisation of Saddam's dictatorship
"House of Saddam" is an excellent dramatisation of Saddam's rule, starting in 1979. With high production standards, excellent performances and truly blood chilling scenes, this is unmissable television.
This four part drama series provides an insight into the world of the Husseins and looks at Saddam's relationships with family, friends, allies and enemies. It appears to be a well researched piece and, despite dramatic licence, you feel you're watching actual events unfold.
9 out of 10. Excellent.
This four part drama series provides an insight into the world of the Husseins and looks at Saddam's relationships with family, friends, allies and enemies. It appears to be a well researched piece and, despite dramatic licence, you feel you're watching actual events unfold.
9 out of 10. Excellent.
Great Casting!
If viewers are expecting a factual summary of Saddam Hussein's life, they will be disappointed. I'm sure there are better documentaries on the subject. But for pure casting pleasure, I would heartily recommend HoS. Director Jim O'Hanlon has assembled a truly international cast, including celebrated Iranian actress Shohreh Aghdashloo (so marvelous in "House of Sand & Fog"), Indian actress Shivani Ghai, and Palestinian actor Makram Khoury (great as Tariq Aziz).
Most impressive is celebrated actor Yigal Naor as Saddam. He exudes the perfect combination of ruthlessness and charm that propelled the tyrant into power. That Hussein is portrayed by a Jew-- and Israeli-born Jew-- is probably sending the old goat into cartwheels. Pure poetic justice!
Most impressive is celebrated actor Yigal Naor as Saddam. He exudes the perfect combination of ruthlessness and charm that propelled the tyrant into power. That Hussein is portrayed by a Jew-- and Israeli-born Jew-- is probably sending the old goat into cartwheels. Pure poetic justice!
scary as he used to be
in fact , am watching this drama and writing in the same time. i couldn't wait me and my husband for this to start , we are iraqi and we lived most of our lives under Saddam's regime , this is a good drama about Saddam , it starts when he came to power in 79 , so scary , so unpredictable as he always used to be , we watched him on TV , lived in a country ruled by him , and in this series i am remembering my childhood , and my life in Iraq, i believe this drama is so real offcourse except for the language which is Arabic in reality ,all characters resemble the real ones , with the music and all.
i'll give it 9 starts.
i'll give it 9 starts.
A Solid and Balanced Portrayal of Power and Downfall
I can't judge whether House of Saddam is historically accurate in every detail, but it seems to follow the version of events as they were largely perceived in the Western world at the time. That said, it's a well-crafted and engaging miniseries.
The characters are strong, and where needed, you get just enough background to understand their motivations and relationships. The pacing is excellent, the story moves steadily without ever feeling rushed or stretched. Visually, the series looks great, with solid camerawork that captures both the grandeur and the tension within Saddam's inner circle.
Overall, House of Saddam balances drama and realism effectively. Even if not every historical detail can be verified, it remains a gripping and believable portrayal of a dictator's rise and fall.
The characters are strong, and where needed, you get just enough background to understand their motivations and relationships. The pacing is excellent, the story moves steadily without ever feeling rushed or stretched. Visually, the series looks great, with solid camerawork that captures both the grandeur and the tension within Saddam's inner circle.
Overall, House of Saddam balances drama and realism effectively. Even if not every historical detail can be verified, it remains a gripping and believable portrayal of a dictator's rise and fall.
How to seize power and hold on to it for a quarter of a century
This four-part mini-series grips you from the outset. Yigal Naor's portrayal of the young Saddam is brilliant, seizing power brutally but always with a purpose behind his brutality. This contrasts with the mindless, purposeless brutality of his elder son Uday (Philip Arditti), which comes through in the 2nd and 3rd episodes.
The mini-series' structure, taking four key years in Saddam's life over 24 years, is managed extremely effectively, although one consequence is that some of the best-known incidents of his reign of terror have to be omitted.
The character of each family member develops across the episodes and the overall sense of an all-pervading reign of terror comes over very powerfully.
My main criticism is of the final episode, almost elegiac with a mellow Saddam on the run with a consequent loss of tension and momentum. Although I suppose that, as we all know what happened to him right from the start, this is probably inevitable. But well worth watching and superbly acted by everyone.
The mini-series' structure, taking four key years in Saddam's life over 24 years, is managed extremely effectively, although one consequence is that some of the best-known incidents of his reign of terror have to be omitted.
The character of each family member develops across the episodes and the overall sense of an all-pervading reign of terror comes over very powerfully.
My main criticism is of the final episode, almost elegiac with a mellow Saddam on the run with a consequent loss of tension and momentum. Although I suppose that, as we all know what happened to him right from the start, this is probably inevitable. But well worth watching and superbly acted by everyone.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe Egyptian actor "Amr Waked" got suspended temporary from the Egyptian actors syndicate as he's acting with an Israeli actor "Igal Naor".
- ConexionesFeatured in The 61st Primetime Emmy Awards (2009)
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- How many seasons does House of Saddam have?Con tecnología de Alexa
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