एक मछुआरे के बेटे एडम को सुन्नी इस्लाम की शक्ति के केंद्र काहिरा में अल-अजहर विश्वविद्यालय में अध्ययन करने का विशेषाधिकार दिया जाता है. एडम मिस्र के धार्मिक और राजनीतिक अभिजात्य वर्ग के बीच ... सभी पढ़ेंएक मछुआरे के बेटे एडम को सुन्नी इस्लाम की शक्ति के केंद्र काहिरा में अल-अजहर विश्वविद्यालय में अध्ययन करने का विशेषाधिकार दिया जाता है. एडम मिस्र के धार्मिक और राजनीतिक अभिजात्य वर्ग के बीच संघर्ष का मोहरा बन जाता है.एक मछुआरे के बेटे एडम को सुन्नी इस्लाम की शक्ति के केंद्र काहिरा में अल-अजहर विश्वविद्यालय में अध्ययन करने का विशेषाधिकार दिया जाता है. एडम मिस्र के धार्मिक और राजनीतिक अभिजात्य वर्ग के बीच संघर्ष का मोहरा बन जाता है.
- पुरस्कार
- 5 जीत और कुल 21 नामांकन
Mohammad Bakri
- General Al Sakran
- (as Mohamad Bakri)
Makram Khoury
- Blind Sheikh Negm
- (as Makram J. Khoury)
Ahmed Laissaoui
- Raed
- (as Ahmed Lassaoui)
Hassan El Sayed
- Village Imam
- (as Hassan El-Sayed)
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
If you are not Muslim, chances are you never heard about Al Azhar, which is a university teaching the Islam Sciences since 970 in Cairo, Egypt. They are the ones electing the Great Imam, and have been fully independent from the government since the very beginning. Governments have tried to get into it for centuries, to no avail. The movie starts with the Great Imam dying, and the government's attempt to choose who will be the next one, preferably on the government's side. You follow Adam, a young man who just arrived from his small village to learn about Islam. He gets involved in a situation that gets worse with every decision he makes, but he somehow still continues to learn about Islam between his investigations, prayers, and lack of sleep. He seems like a very pious guy, not understanding what he is getting himself into, and looks lost most of the time. The movie is a bit slow however, and could have used a bit more rhythm or maybe just to be shorter.
This movie has shaken Egypt to its very core, it has been deemed so provocative that it is BANNED. The director is Egyptian, the move is set in Cairo (yet filmed funnily enough in Istanbul because of the ban). It has yeilded award in the Cannes film festival, and it is simply put SUPERB.
The camera is well used, the atmosphere build up is immensely satisfying. And it ultimately proves the old saying "Man will be free when the last King has been strangled with the last priests entrials"- This is a CULT movie in the making. Unfortunately you will never see this film in Egypt.
The camera is well used, the atmosphere build up is immensely satisfying. And it ultimately proves the old saying "Man will be free when the last King has been strangled with the last priests entrials"- This is a CULT movie in the making. Unfortunately you will never see this film in Egypt.
I like it when films shake the foundations of real life supremacy, this film is one of them. The subject matter is a hot topic and a very controversial one, which is why Tarik Saleh, the filmmaker, is persona non grata in Egypt, and the film was shot in Turkey although it is meant to portray the Azhar Mosque.
This is the story of Adam, the son of a fisherman who gets a letter of approval from the Azhar mosque to join their ranks, coincidentally the Imam. Trouble is brewing in the heels of appointing the next Imam!
This is a well made film with a well-made screenplay and memorable performances from the lead actor.
This is the story of Adam, the son of a fisherman who gets a letter of approval from the Azhar mosque to join their ranks, coincidentally the Imam. Trouble is brewing in the heels of appointing the next Imam!
This is a well made film with a well-made screenplay and memorable performances from the lead actor.
Boy From Heaven is a watchable, exciting film where the action is set in Egypt and at the religious Al-Azhar University. The main character Adam, brilliantly played by Tawfeek Barhom gets a place at this university. He gives up his life as a fisherman and starts his studies. The film then takes a very surprising turn, becoming a suspense film, a thriller in an environment that is rarely depicted on film. Swedish Fares Fares has the other lead role, and together with Barhom they give life to the main characters in the film.
At a time when mainstream film is almost everything that gets a mention and that "everyone" must see, it is liberating to see such a film of this quality.
I would like to see more of Fares Fares and Tawfeek Barhom, and director Tarik Saleh has already shown that he can make quality films, both dramas and now thrillers.
Give this and other films that aren't necessarily on everyone's lips a chance. They give us diversity and very good entertainment.
At a time when mainstream film is almost everything that gets a mention and that "everyone" must see, it is liberating to see such a film of this quality.
I would like to see more of Fares Fares and Tawfeek Barhom, and director Tarik Saleh has already shown that he can make quality films, both dramas and now thrillers.
Give this and other films that aren't necessarily on everyone's lips a chance. They give us diversity and very good entertainment.
When the elderly Grand Imam of Cairo's prestigious Al-Azhar University passes away suddenly, a scramble ensues over the appointment of his replacement, one that involves the maneuverings of various vested interests from religious fundamentalists to political pragmatists to devoutly spiritual purists. But who will ultimately take over? That depends on the efforts of a young new student who becomes caught up in this power struggle, the pious son of a fisherman who's unwittingly recruited as a state security informant to infiltrate a group of academic ideological extremists. This slowburn thriller (sometimes a little too slow for its own good, especially in the middle) draws on this scenario to examine the diverse dynamics of Egyptian politics and religion, especially the often-tenuous relationship between the two, as played out through the internal (though publicly high-profile) workings of this long-established, well-respected educational institution. Writer-director Tarek Saleh's latest is a finely acted, capably made production (a noteworthy accomplishment given that the controversial filmmaker's work had to be shot outside of Egypt), though it occasionally lacks the gripping tension needed to give the picture's narrative the kind of dramatic heft that an offering like this requires, especially considering the high stakes involved in this story. While this Cannes Film Festival award winner for best screenplay is a work of fiction and said to poignantly reflect the prevailing conditions found in these institutions, the script, pacing and overall tone could have stood to be less subtle and more pointedly compelling. Indeed, "Cairo Conspiracy" is a suitably attention-holding watch with a solid underlying premise, but it would have been better if it had been a little less conventional and wielded a more pronounced edge.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाA few days before the shooting in Egypt for The Nile Hilton Incident (2017) was supposed to take place, director Tarik Saleh was publicly removed from the country and told not to come back. As a result, that movie was shot in Casablanca, Morocco. As he's still persona non grata in Egypt, he couldn't shoot स्वर्ग से लड़का (2022) there, thus despite being set in Cairo, the film was actually shot in Istanbul, Turkey, mostly in the Süleymanye mosque.
- कनेक्शनFeatured in Il était une fois...: La conspiration du Caire (2024)
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
- How long is Cairo Conspiracy?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
विवरण
बॉक्स ऑफ़िस
- बजट
- €65,00,000(अनुमानित)
- दुनिया भर में सकल
- $48,67,691
- चलने की अवधि
- 2 घं 6 मि(126 min)
- रंग
- ध्वनि मिश्रण
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 2.39 : 1
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