Plantiana
Yawn. Poorly Filmed Snooze Fest.
Ensofter
Overrated and overhyped
Fairaher
The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.
Patience Watson
One of those movie experiences that is so good it makes you realize you've been grading everything else on a curve.
lookslikelykkeli
Basically a copy of Argo set in Lebanon. The acting is sub-par, especially the Seth Rogen lookalike character. Skip this.
Ian
(flash Review)Small time drug peddlers aiming to go straight are forced into one last job for their boss which sets them off into a new direction and vision. The last job doesn't go as planned and they get their hands on a pile of drugs. Thinking ingeniously, they plan to smuggle the drugs in movie film canisters as those don't get x-rayed at airports (not thinking about drug smelling dogs may be a plot hole). They go so far as to set up to produce a real movie to cloak their illegal activity. How will things shake out from here? Really creative script with honest dialog and acting. Mix in some nice surprises within good pacing and editing = a great little film.
Habib Saleh
giving this film 10/10 was not that hard, for everyone who is able to watch this film, don't miss a chance to watch it, very big shot is a very big film !! excellent characters building, excellent plot, very realistic and brilliant script with a very moving story, such an amazing film !! The film explores fraternal relationships, Christian- Muslim relationships, Lebanon's recent violent history and film making and all under two hours! The script is witty, the acting superb and set and location edgy and evocative. The ending is very ambiguous and can be interpreted in one obvious way. The director, who was present at the London film festival's screening, declined to fix the interpretation of the ending, leaving to up to viewers to decide the line that leads to Ziad's final act. It is clear that this film is deeply symbolic and represents Lebanon and its politics as much as any domestic action drama.
PoppyTransfusion
This is an exciting and funny film that ends ambiguously. A trio of brothers - Ziad, Joe and Jad(o) - are involved in a fight that goes awry. Ziad shoots their foe with the latter's gun and a murder enquiry ensues. The youngest brother, Jad, decides to confess to the murder pleading manslaughter. Although the police are sceptical of his confession, Jad is sentenced to a reduced prison term for manslaughter and serves 5 years.Ziad and Joe continue to run their father's pizza take away and become involved with a local drug lord who uses their delivery service to supply cocaine. To make reparations to Jad, Ziad wants to stop their criminal activities in favour of purchasing a restaurant that he can run with Jad whilst Joe continues with the take away. The drug lord, Abu Ali, does not agree to Ziad's proposition and appears to set up Ziad's murder as a consequence.In revenge Ziad takes Abu's drug consignment and intends to market it himself in order to provide for the restaurant. He learns that cinema reels for development are not subject to the same security procedures when being freighted abroad and decides to use this as cover to sell his illicit merchandise. He recruits an associate, who is a budding film director, to help him and much hilarity ensues as they embark upon making a real film as legitimate cover for the drug exports. This allows for many wry digs at film makers and production.Meanwhile Abu Ali and his henchman, Hussam, are planning their own revenge on Ziad and realise from Ziad's exploits that there is limited time within which to act. Cue explosions, the media and a kidnapping. All merry mayhem that seems unlikely to end well.The film explores fraternal relationships, Christian-Muslim relationships, Lebanon's recent violent history and film making and all under two hours! The script is witty, the acting superb and set and location edgy and evocative. The ending is very ambiguous and can be interpreted in one obvious way. The director, who was present at the London film festival's screening, declined to fix the interpretation of the ending, leaving to up to viewers to decide the line that leads to Ziad's final act. It is clear that this film is deeply symbolic and represents Lebanon and its politics as much as any domestic action drama.If you have the opportunity to see the film then take it. As I write it is making film festival rounds in the hope of achieving distribution. It had yet to be screened in Beirut and there was a nervousness about how it would be received, if at all, given the director eschewed the Lebanese guidelines for film production.