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IMDbPro

Cairo Time

  • 2009
  • PG
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
7K
YOUR RATING
Patricia Clarkson and Alexander Siddig in Cairo Time (2009)
A romantic drama about a brief, unexpected love affair that catches two people completely off-guard.

Juliette, a fashion magazine editor in her 40s, travels to Cairo to meet her husband, Mark, a UN official working in Gaza, for a three week vacation. When he is unavoidably delayed, he sends his friend Tareq, who had been his security officer for many years, to escort her throughout the beautiful and exotic city. The last thing anyone expects is that they will fall in love.
Play trailer1:56
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DramaRomance

A romantic drama about a brief, unexpected love affair that catches two people completely off-guard.A romantic drama about a brief, unexpected love affair that catches two people completely off-guard.A romantic drama about a brief, unexpected love affair that catches two people completely off-guard.

  • Director
    • Ruba Nadda
  • Writer
    • Ruba Nadda
  • Stars
    • Patricia Clarkson
    • Alexander Siddig
    • Elena Anaya
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ruba Nadda
    • Writer
      • Ruba Nadda
    • Stars
      • Patricia Clarkson
      • Alexander Siddig
      • Elena Anaya
    • 69User reviews
    • 88Critic reviews
    • 67Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 2 nominations total

    Videos2

    Cairo Time
    Trailer 1:56
    Cairo Time
    Cairo Time
    Clip 2:15
    Cairo Time
    Cairo Time
    Clip 2:15
    Cairo Time

    Photos44

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    Top cast50

    Edit
    Patricia Clarkson
    Patricia Clarkson
    • Juliette Grant
    Alexander Siddig
    Alexander Siddig
    • Tareq Khalifa
    Elena Anaya
    Elena Anaya
    • Kathryn
    Amina Annabi
    • Yasmeen
    Tom McCamus
    Tom McCamus
    • Mark
    Mona Hala
    • Jameelah
    Fadia Nadda
    • Hanan
    Mohamed Abdel Fatah
    • Customs Officer
    • (as Mohammed Abdel Fattah)
    Hossam Abdulla
    • Porter
    Nabil Shazli
    • Manager
    Ahmed Ghareeb
    • Propositioning Man
    Hanafi Mohamoud El Gazar
    • Shoe Shopkeeper
    Roanne Bell
    • Sharon
    Andrew Cullen
    • Jim
    Katie Sherif
    • Petroleum Wife #1
    Michelle Power
    • Petroleum Wife #2
    Sarah Farouk Ahmed
    • Petroleum Wife #3
    Ibrahim Abdullah
    • Mohammed
    • Director
      • Ruba Nadda
    • Writer
      • Ruba Nadda
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews69

    6.66.9K
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    Featured reviews

    10kimintuitive

    Loved the pace of the film

    Cairo Time is beautifully filmed - like a love poem to Egypt. I adored the slower pace of the movie because it felt like it gave me a chance to breathe, to enjoy the gorgeous scenery, and sink into the feeling of the movie. It was wonderfully nostalgic of many of the things I experienced on a trip to Egypt I took 2 years ago, and I found myself laughing out loud a few times, remembering.

    I was also reminded of the allure of Egyptian men - yes, they are very obvious, in-your-face, and verbal to women, which I'm not used to as a Canadian woman. Yet paradoxically, many are very much gentlemen, cordial. I liked seeing this in Tareq's character, as he put Juliette on a pedestal which you really come to feel she deserves.

    I also liked how the love story was actually quite innocent and told a story of pure love and appreciation for a fellow human being. It felt like it portrayed exactly those moments of stillness and deep feeling that we only share with select few in our lifetimes. Experiences that we recall with our eyes closed...like secret, subtle moments the heart remembers and cherishes.
    8BobStage

    A story of love discovered...

    I've known Alexander Siddig from playing Dr. Bashir on "Star Trek; Deep Space Nine". I've seen Patricia Clarkson in "Jumanji" and "Vicky Christina Barcelona". Both these two actors unite to give us a very touching love story set in the background of Cairo.

    Egypt is a timeless land that has had history's touch upon it even as it enters the new millennium. People's lives are bound to the countryside as well as the old cities modernized with technology. Ruba Nadda, a young Canadian film maker, has set her newest story in the city of Cairo. It concerns the clash of two very different cultures, and how the past and present collide to form such a layered city as Cairo. As well as showing us wonderful scenes within the city, we are given exceptional cinematography of the surrounding countryside. The White Desert and the Pyramids stand out, etched out in the land, seemingly by giants who preceded modern civilization.

    The film follows Juliette, a middle-aged woman arriving in Egypt. She would have been with her husband, but he is away on a mission for the UN. Her two children have grown up and have moved into adult phases of their lives. She is left to see the city by herself, aided by an old friend of her husband's: the middle-aged Egyptian Tariq, a retired policeman who now owns a coffee shop in Cairo. He helps Juliette out of his friendship to the absent Mark, and Juliette is intrigued by this soft-spoken man. Their feelings inevitably grow into affection, but the gradual steps taken to that stage is what makes the movie so tender and well made. Juliette's explorations of Cairo and the people that live within its shadow give us a view into the foreign culture that lies waiting to be discovered.

    If Juliette must carry the movie, she is supported by some well-made characters. Tariq is clearly the prominent of these, but there is also Yasmeen, the former love interest of Tariq who wants to rekindle the relationship, and Kathryn, a kindly woman who leads Juliette on a trip in the White Desert outside of the city. And of course, there is the ever absent Mark, who is continually held away from his wife.

    To say that this is a sentimental piece that tugs on heart-strings is redundant. However, it has a life of its own beyond the stereotypes of the genre, brought about by the fantastic chemistry between Patricia Clarkson and Alexander Siddig. The two of them are professional actors and give us a love story that rivals the epic romance "Out of Africa" or the low-key "Lost in Translation".

    Ruba Nadda also provides us with a well-written script that feels natural to the actors' tongues and the audience's ears. The mood of the film seems whimsical and light-hearted, especially during the scenes between the two leads, but there is a serious undertone played into the film. Questions are silently presented, aimed against such themes as love, fidelity, culture, and loneliness. Both characters are certainly lonely: Tariq has isolated himself from those that loved him, withdrawing into a kind of politeness that seems to discourage intimacy, while Juliette is isolated from her friends, her work, children, and her husband. Both need human contact, even as both must come to terms with their lives and what has come out of it all.

    This small Canadian production has received a number of positive reviews, and has also won the Best Canadian Feature Award at the Toronto Film Festival. While I have certainly not seen all the Canadian films this year, I can definitely say that this was worthy of such an award. English Canadian cinema is so over-shadowed by Hollywood that one wonders if such cinema exists when compared to Quebec's film industry. However, once in a while, one can find such gems as this production, and be content to know that being Canadian means laying claim to truly great films such as this one.
    7noran_1987

    that's not all Cairo

    the movie was really good Um Kalthoum's great songs were amazing background music for the movie and Abdel Halim Hafez's too, the marvelous sites of Egypt and the sound of the Adan (the call for the Muslim prayer) all were fantastic...but as an Egyptian there were some stuff that were not realistic to me.

    First was the accent of Tarek in the movie it wasn't Egyptian at all..

    Second it only showed the crowded messed streets of Cairo and describing Cairo as "such a mess" disappointed me as an Egyptian living in Cairo, it didn't show the neat sites like Maadi, Heliopolis or Zamalek which the hotel supposed to be located at, which I believe must be a five stars hotel being by the Nile yet bizarrely the receptionists were not working at night which was extremely weird and doesn't happen at any place in the world!!!

    Ruba Nadda wanted to convey a specific ancient image of Cairo but this can't be the whole image about Cairo now,, that movie would be realistic but 50 years ago..
    Jawsphobia

    See it with whoever is handy

    Cairo Time could be the solution to the date movie, so subtle and full of empathy it has no time for anything that might embarrass the person you are with and you'll have something to talk about later. I saw it alone for logistical reasons, but from the middle of the second row it was quite emersive. I'm no Cairofile; all I know is that the place has pyramids and a funny word for the water pipes they smoke. Those things are touched upon, but the movie avoids becoming a travelogue. Patricia Clarkson (The Green Mile) arrives for a vacation with her United Nations honcho husband Mark only to find he isn't there. He'll be busy in Gaza for a while (which is never played for a joke although we get the idea that settling things in Gaza could take a while). Alexander Siddig (Dr. Bashir from Star Trek: Deep Space Nine) a former co-worker of Mark meets her instead and acts as a guide where he can. He would show her the pyramids right away, but she has promised her husband to see them for the first time with him. We might be able to guess where this is heading, but the surprise is that scenes that might not read as 2009 ADD generation content is actually loaded and engaging. We are waiting for tea to steep and not getting bored. Clarkson takes on more of a glow as the movie goes on, but in the early scenes it is her character Juliette's vulnerability that has our focus. A bunch of random flirtations from guys on the street might be a minor irritant in the USA or Toronto's Annex neighbourhood, but here there is a growing sense of jeopardy which reinforces the bubble of trust Siddig's character creates. For another character to burst that bubble by violating the camera frame with a sudden lunge from the teaming masses would be a shame, an intrusion of reality. And yet the film is very realistic as to the unexpressed aspect of life that can turn a bland setting into a postcard perfect image depending who you are with. The director Ruba Nadda spoke after the Varsity cinema screening I attended and it is remarkable that amid the strategies needed to pull off this movie she managed to maintain such a subtle focus. It is nice that also Christine Vachon's brand is there as a producer to suggest how subtlety in a movie might even be considered quirky. But it definitely has the patience and quiet faith in detail that mark Ruba Nadda's previous movie Sabah. I would love to read a diary publication about the making of Cairo Time. From content to execution it is apparently a film only Ruba could have made - it has both ethnic trappings with gravitas and an accessible romantic, dramatic structure of entertainment.
    8rima_z

    Great Feel-Good Movie

    Very well-cast crew. Incredibly perceptive and observant director. Took me back to Cairo. Alexander Siddiq is so cute in this movie. Its good to see a movie that does not follow the typical Hollywood American action crap with a climax and a happy ending.

    This movie in my opinion was not a typical movie with a plot but more like a trip to Cairo. A sweet memorable trip very identical to my trip and experience there last year, minus the lovely Alexander..

    Well done Rubba. Keep them coming... wouldn't mind watching a Granada time or Barcelona time..Beirut time or Istanbul or Kathmandu time...if u can do the same thing with those cities, u'r my hero...

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Although playing an Egyptian, Alexander Siddig hails from Sudan (although his mother is English).
    • Goofs
      The position of the women during the wedding sequence changes constantly.
    • Quotes

      Juliette Grant: I always wanted to be a singer.

      Tareq Khalifa: What stopped you?

      Juliette Grant: My voice.

    • Connections
      Featured in The Rotten Tomatoes Show: Despicable Me/The Kids Are All Right (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      Let's Go
      Performed by Catlow

      Written by Natasha Thirsk and Brian Carson(SOCAN/ASCAP)

      Published by Dirtmitts Publishing

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 16, 2009 (Canada)
    • Countries of origin
      • Canada
      • Ireland
      • Egypt
    • Languages
      • English
      • Arabic
    • Also known as
      • 開羅假期
    • Filming locations
      • Shepheard Hotel, Cairo, Egypt
    • Production companies
      • Foundry Films
      • Samson Films
      • Astral Media
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $1,603,616
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $66,245
      • Aug 8, 2010
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,477,315
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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