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Last Men in Aleppo

  • 2017
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 44m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
3.1K
YOUR RATING
Last Men in Aleppo (2017)
After five years of war in Syria, Aleppo's remaining residents prepare themselves for a siege. Khalid, Subhi and Mahmoud, founding members of The White Helmets, have remained in the city to help their fellow citizens-and experience daily life, death, struggle and triumph in a city under fire.
Play trailer2:44
1 Video
33 Photos
Political DocumentaryDocumentaryWar

Khaled, Mahmoud and Subhi volunteer with the White Helmets trying to save lives of hundreds of victims in the besieged city of Aleppo during the Syrian Civil War.Khaled, Mahmoud and Subhi volunteer with the White Helmets trying to save lives of hundreds of victims in the besieged city of Aleppo during the Syrian Civil War.Khaled, Mahmoud and Subhi volunteer with the White Helmets trying to save lives of hundreds of victims in the besieged city of Aleppo during the Syrian Civil War.

  • Directors
    • Feras Fayyad
    • Steen Johannessen
  • Writer
    • Feras Fayyad
  • Stars
    • Khaled Umar Harah
    • Batul
    • Mahmoud Alheter
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    3.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Feras Fayyad
      • Steen Johannessen
    • Writer
      • Feras Fayyad
    • Stars
      • Khaled Umar Harah
      • Batul
      • Mahmoud Alheter
    • 13User reviews
    • 41Critic reviews
    • 80Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 26 wins & 17 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:44
    Official Trailer

    Photos32

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    Top cast17

    Edit
    Khaled Umar Harah
    • Self - volunteer rescue worker
    Batul
    • Self - Khalid Umar Harah's daughter
    Mahmoud Alheter
    • Self - volunteer rescue worker
    • (as Mahmoud)
    Abu Umar
    • Self
    Abu Husain
    • Self
    Abu Walid
    • Self
    Abu Omar
    • Self
    Isra
    • Self - Khalid Umar Harah's daughter
    Abu Yusuf
    • Self
    Ahmad
    • Self - Mahmoud's brother
    Abu Sabih
    • Self
    Subhi Alhussen
    • Self - volunteer rescue worker
    Shabab Badawi
    • Self - White Helmet worker
    Fawzi Barghot
    • Self - White Helmet worker
    Hasan Hannan
    • Self - White Helmet worker
    Mohammed Mashahadani
    • Self - White Helmet worker
    Ayman Seter
    • Self - White Helmet worker
    • Directors
      • Feras Fayyad
      • Steen Johannessen
    • Writer
      • Feras Fayyad
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews13

    7.43K
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    Featured reviews

    8albertval-69560

    Amid the Rubble

    This is not your usual documentary film with resource persons/interviewees and a host or narrator. It's told from a first-person point of view. The actors are the subjects playing as themselves in real time as events unfold.

    It captures vividly the stark realities of war that the victims will never forget as long as they live. The wanton destruction is stupefying. And the live video shots make sure that we'll remember the ugliness of war.

    The viewer is a witness to the brave, heroic efforts of the White Helmets. The viewer watches them go about their grim business of clearing the rubble caused by barrel bombs, retrieving dead bodies of their fellow holdouts, gathering torn limbs and other body parts. Yet in between the bombings, the people try as much to live a normal life: attending the wedding of a colleague, building an aquarium for pet fish out of an unused water fountain, playing with their kids in the playground while on the lookout for war planes above.

    The viewer isn't surprised by the ending. On the contrary, he seems to expect it given that the White Helmets know exactly what they're up against. Still, Batoul's phone messages to his father Khaled Omar Harrah are heart-rending.

    The documentary owes its existence to Mahmoud and Khaled but most specially to Khaled.
    8michael-young-585

    Movies Aren't Always Fun

    Not all movies are fun, and this one sure isn't. But that doesn't mean it isn't a good movie.

    The emotions raised in this movie are one's of disgust and sympathy. Disgust for the actions of the Syrian government, and its Russian allies, in bombing the crap out of one of their own cities (Aleppo). The destruction portrayed here is, frankly unimaginable, as you see the bombs being dropped on a city that probably has more bombed out homes and apartments than livable ones. How, you can't help but ask, can a government do that to its own people? Is there really any justification for this kind of behavior?

    There aren't many reviews in IMDB for this movie, but one of them is from a Syrian government sympathizer who claims that the images and story presented here are nothing but anti-government propaganda. Well, if that is what it is, then they have gone to incredible lengths to create an alternative, fictional universe and the filmmakers deserve awards not for documentary feature, but best special effects. I don't know how you could fake many of these scenes.

    The sympathy comes from the story that unfolds in this documentary for a small band of dedicated Aleppans (?) called the White Helmets. These people are sort of the equivalent of a fire department, except that fighting fires is probably the smallest part of their job. Mostly they spend days on end digging people, some of them alive, but most of them dead, out from under the collapsed buildings where they used to live. Most of the bodies are those of children and women and the horror of finding unattached limbs is not sugar-coated here. How you ask, can these people continue to live here.

    And, an even bigger question is how can these White Helmets do this kind of work day after day? We see one of the men, a leader of one of the brigades, find some small amount of solace in creating a gold-fish pond in his courtyard. His love for his family, and his city, is so strong and, especially at the end, it is difficult not to cry for him.

    This is not a feel-good movie - there is no way you can laugh during this movie, nor feel better about the prospects of these people. But it is a powerful and effective documentary that opens your eyes to both what is evil in men, and how much good can be found in those who fight it. I give this 4 stars (out of 5).
    8evanston_dad

    What Do You Say About a Movie Like This?

    Ooff....I can't even.

    How do you review a movie like "Last Men in Aleppo?" It's about as opposite from entertaining as you're likely to get, yet it should be watched by everybody. It's incredibly urgent, yet it's so lacking in hope that it seems naive to think it will inspire any kind of action or change. It's basically an obituary for a country that hasn't completely died yet, but is certainly dying. And doing so while the world stands back and watches.

    Last year, the film that won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short Subject was about a member of the White Helmets, a volunteer emergency response group in Syria. He enjoyed 15 minutes of fame when footage of him pulling a living baby from rubble circulated the Internet. That man is now the focus of "Last Men in Aleppo," a film that chronicles his life and eventual death as a member of the White Helmets. Whereas "The White Helmets," in that image of a rescued baby, offered some ounce of hope to cling to, "Last Men in Aleppo" offers nothing but despair. It's the kind of movie that makes it difficult to go about your daily life. The mundane minutiae of being a privileged American -- my biggest annoyance right now is that the motion-sensor light on my garage needs to be replaced -- make me almost embarrassed to enjoy a life of extreme luxury compared to the living conditions of these poor poor people in Syria. That the developed world stood back and watched this conflict happen with a shrug of its collective shoulders will go down in history as one of its most shameful moments.

    Grade: A
    8rblenheim

    A moving documentary about the civil war in Syria that pulls no punches

    "Last Men in Aleppo", is a shattering Danish/Syrian documentary about the Syrian Civil War that should leave you in anger and tears after viewing it.

    Beginning as a film editor, Syrian writer/director Firas Fayvad previously had made documentaries for television, his most famous being "On the Other Side", the making of which resulted in Fayyad's arrest and torture for nine months between 2011 and 2012. But even that has not achieved the level of international fame "Last Men in Aleppo" has brought him, for it documents the efforts of the White Helmets, an organization consisting of ordinary citizens whose purpose is to save civilians (especially children) who are buried under the rubble from continuous bombings by the Soviet Union unabashedly targeting apartment buildings, hospitals and non-military establishments.

    What is so shocking about this film is the way it plants the viewer in the middle of the violence as it is happening, and from the point of view of the heroic rescuers. There are deliberate lulls in the film in which we live in the houses with the families of the White Helmets, but that just makes the inhuman tragedy even more shocking when the violence comes. This is a film impossible to forget once seen.
    10Morpheus640

    Devastating

    10 stars for the bravery of the innocent children and men who risked there lives

    Assad and putin prove there is no god . Just mass murderers who live in opulence as they slaughter children.

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    Related interests

    The Fight (2020)
    Political Documentary
    Dziga Vertov in Man with a Movie Camera (1929)
    Documentary
    Band of Brothers (2001)
    War

    Storyline

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    • Connections
      Featured in The Oscars (2018)

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    FAQ3

    • who is the mean Director for last men in Aleppo?
    • How long has this film been filmed?
    • where the film shot?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 27, 2017 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Denmark
      • Syria
    • Official site
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Language
      • Arabic
    • Also known as
      • 阿勒坡最後的男人
    • Filming locations
      • Aleppo, Syria(location)
    • Production companies
      • Aleppo Media Center
      • Larm Film
      • Kloos & Co. Medien GmbH
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $14,637
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $1,505
      • May 7, 2017
    • Gross worldwide
      • $14,637
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 44m(104 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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