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Review: Yellowbrickroad
Reviews
The Yacoubian Building
Three-hour Egyptian epic
By
MICHAEL ATKINSON
|
December 12, 2007
THE YACOUBIAN BUILDING
" alt="photo of 'THE YACOUBIAN BUILDING'">
2.5
Stars
THE YACOUBIAN BUILDING: A Cairo-based Gone with the Wind.
This three-hour Egyptian epic — the most expensive ever made, and the first to get US release — has been crafted in the old school, by youngish pro Marwan Hamed, as a massive Arabic soap opera, a Cairo-based
Gone with the Wind
swoony with mourning for a privileged colonialist past and with a melodramatic fascination for the bloody ideological conflicts of the present. Notably in a nation with strict censorship laws (somewhere slackly west of Iranian
sharia
), Hamed’s film revolves around the need for, and the degeneration of, sex and money, and it’s groundbreakingly frank in its native territory about homosexuality and female exploitation. Hammy, lavish, and often thunderfooted, the movie is an immersion in rare pulp, and as much a window on Egyptian urbanity as on a semi-polished Arab film industry trying to come to grips with a tumultuous world and its own sociopolitical contradictions.
Arabic | 161 minutes | MFA: December 14-16, 20, 22-23, 29-30; January 6
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