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Reviews1
mondasalem's rating
La Moakhzaa is a movie which tackles controversial issues in the Egyptian society starting from religion, class distinction, and public schools education to harassment. The impressive dialog as well as the effectively employed music kept the audience on the edge of their seats as they were drawn in the movie right away. The plot starts by the death of the main character's father. Hany AbdAllah an upper middle class Christian boy and his widowed mother face trouble as they inherit nothing but debt.
After his father's death, his mother is obliged to transfer him from an international private school to a public boys-only school. The new school is where his struggle begins, forced either to mingle or to be treated as an outcast. Being from a different background, Hany faces trouble trying to fit in. However, it turns out to be not as easy as thought. All his trials to belong go in vain which leads to his loss of identity being treated as an outcast. Eventually, he hides his true religion to prevent himself from being twice alienated.
The public school serves as a minuscule to the local society which is governed by ignorance, dogmas, intolerance and discrimination. Hany then realizes that he's not the only one who is trying to conform, he finds his teachers, Nelly and Amin- who was once his friend. It surprises him that Amin acts as a totally different person in that society. However later on, he could not vent his anger and fight for virtues which make no sense in such society.
In addition, Hany relates to his science teacher, Nelly because she somehow looked like his mother or resembled the background he came from. He could not understand why other boys viewed her in a different sense only because she did not look like them. He attempts to warn her from the other boys' plan to harass her but his attempt is in vain. Later on when he meets her once again in church, he is startled to discover that she's a Muslim which states that normal moderate Muslim tolerant people do exist somewhere is this fragmented society apart from hate speech and nonsense clichés.
At the end, Hany AbdAllah deforms into a schizophrenic double-standard character having to deal with both societies; that which he comes from and the other which he has found himself in.
Despite the movie's minor shortcomings, La Moakhza is a creative movie shedding light on serious issues in the Egyptian society through a comic scenario. It is well worth a few hours of your time for it will certainly give you a good laugh.
After his father's death, his mother is obliged to transfer him from an international private school to a public boys-only school. The new school is where his struggle begins, forced either to mingle or to be treated as an outcast. Being from a different background, Hany faces trouble trying to fit in. However, it turns out to be not as easy as thought. All his trials to belong go in vain which leads to his loss of identity being treated as an outcast. Eventually, he hides his true religion to prevent himself from being twice alienated.
The public school serves as a minuscule to the local society which is governed by ignorance, dogmas, intolerance and discrimination. Hany then realizes that he's not the only one who is trying to conform, he finds his teachers, Nelly and Amin- who was once his friend. It surprises him that Amin acts as a totally different person in that society. However later on, he could not vent his anger and fight for virtues which make no sense in such society.
In addition, Hany relates to his science teacher, Nelly because she somehow looked like his mother or resembled the background he came from. He could not understand why other boys viewed her in a different sense only because she did not look like them. He attempts to warn her from the other boys' plan to harass her but his attempt is in vain. Later on when he meets her once again in church, he is startled to discover that she's a Muslim which states that normal moderate Muslim tolerant people do exist somewhere is this fragmented society apart from hate speech and nonsense clichés.
At the end, Hany AbdAllah deforms into a schizophrenic double-standard character having to deal with both societies; that which he comes from and the other which he has found himself in.
Despite the movie's minor shortcomings, La Moakhza is a creative movie shedding light on serious issues in the Egyptian society through a comic scenario. It is well worth a few hours of your time for it will certainly give you a good laugh.