IMDb RATING
7.5/10
5.3K
YOUR RATING
A Christian kid suddenly is forced to go to a public school after his father dies and because of a misunderstanding everyone thinks that he's a Muslim.A Christian kid suddenly is forced to go to a public school after his father dies and because of a misunderstanding everyone thinks that he's a Muslim.A Christian kid suddenly is forced to go to a public school after his father dies and because of a misunderstanding everyone thinks that he's a Muslim.
- Awards
- 2 wins total
Dash Ahmed
- Hani Abdullah Bitar Susah
- (as Ahmad Dash)
Hany Adel
- Abdullah Bitar Susah
- (as Hani Adel)
Muhammad Adel
- Amin
- (as Mohamed Adel)
- Directors
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
10helfarra
This is the first time in my life to watch a movie twice in one week. if you watch this movie, you will laugh, love and enjoy. and you will feel that you want to watch it again. there is a topic. and there is a suffering that is well expressed exactly as it exists in real life not exaggerated nor underestimated. however, the suffering does not prevent you to laugh from your heart and does not hinder you to enjoy the movie. pictures and music are exceptionally great. the voice of Ahmed Helmy also added to the movie. kinda Allosh is gorgeous in her role. Of course you will have a better understanding to the movie if you are Egyptian and if you have ever attended a public school in Egypt. however, you will enjoy it any ways I strongly recommend watching this movie.
You will laugh, cry, and feel every emotion in between.
Wonderfully entertaining. The acting was great as well, especially the boy who played Hang.
Wonderfully entertaining. The acting was great as well, especially the boy who played Hang.
One of my biggest regrets of attending last year's London Film Festival is skipping out on Excuse My French when it was my next screening. It's always refreshing to find rare films as an inflight movie. Despite the circumstances, Excuse My French is still a film with a great rhythmic energy, reminiscent of the auteur work of Wes Anderson and Jean-Pierre Jeunet. While this pace is kept up throughout the whole film, it's disappointing that it doesn't implement enough quirk or edge into its content. It brushes over clichés, albeit utilising them well, but not exploring them beyond archetypal necessity. Films that dive into school environments with such immersion and heightened fantasy are usually hit-and-miss for me, and this is both at the same time. Perhaps if I understood or related more to the Muslim/Christian tension in Egypt then the film's political themes could've resonated more, but it's entertaining and empathetic at the very least. Being different and pushed around is easy to relate to in any form and well executed here. With his idiosyncratic style, Amr Salama could easily give us a couple of great commercials before breaking through with a mainstream movie if he wished to do so.
7/10
7/10
This movie deals with religon, peer pressure, toxic masculinity, and the innocence of childhood in a great way, and the ending(no spoilers) is genius.
I liked the film, it was super artsy and enjoyable, except for a couple of bits that felt cheesy (even with the context of satire). The musical choices and soundtrack were honestly exhausting and repetitive and had a very generic vibe, like stock music (I was very surprised to find out it was original).
I really liked the art directing and the cinematography, but the editing fell a little short for me, because some scenes felt dull (maybe it was the lack of music or intentional), but they kinda drag and bored me.
The final sound mixing of the film made it very uncomfortable to watch on a big screen. The sound levels were off and the general quality was poor (I understand it's an indie production but still).
Overall it was a nice experience and the storytelling was decent.
I really liked the art directing and the cinematography, but the editing fell a little short for me, because some scenes felt dull (maybe it was the lack of music or intentional), but they kinda drag and bored me.
The final sound mixing of the film made it very uncomfortable to watch on a big screen. The sound levels were off and the general quality was poor (I understand it's an indie production but still).
Overall it was a nice experience and the storytelling was decent.
- How long is Excuse My French?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- La Moakhza
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 39m(99 min)
- Color
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content