[go: up one dir, main page]

Al lailu lana (Arabic: الليل لنا, translit.al-lail lana, English: The Night is Ours) is a 1949 Egyptian film directed by and starring Mahmoud Zulfikar.[1][2] The cast includes Sabah and Suleiman Naguib.[3][4][5][6]

Al lailu lana
Theatrical poster
الليل لنا
Directed byMahmoud Zulfikar
Written byYoussef Gohar
StarringMahmoud Zulfikar
Sabah
CinematographyBruno Salvi
Diaa Eddine Mahdi
Edited byEmil Bahary
Music byRiad Al Sunbati
Charl Vuscolo
Production
company
Aziza Amir Films
Distributed byBahna Films
Release date
  • 1949 (1949)
Running time
100 minutes
CountryEgypt
LanguageEgyptian Arabic

Plot

edit

Nawal, a singer, and Maysa, a dancer, are two friends who work in a mobile band. The band manager Mohsen takes them to the city of El Mahalla El Kubra. Mohsen takes their revenue and runs away, so the owner of the hall expels them. Nawal and Maysa are thrown out of their hotel and they spend the night in the street, eventually finding an empty car to sleep in. When the owner of the car came, Dr. Wahid Kamel, who was on a home visit, and when he got into his car, he knew of their presence and they recognized him after he was misleading that they were teachers. Wahid saw Nawal again, and they are red to fall in love with each other and Wahid told his father, the Pasha that he wants to marry a school teacher, and he refused. Nawal came out of the theater at night in acting clothes and makeup, so the morals police suspected her and chased her, so she hid in the apartment of Abbas Hamed, the painter who drank a lot until he became drunk and told her that he would kill his uncle who was a guardian on him and stole all his inheritance, then he passed out. Nawal tried to take the keys from his pocket, but she couldn't, so she spent the night in the apartment, and in the morning she managed to take the keys and went out, while the police raided the apartment and arrested Abbas on charges of killing his uncle, who had been killed the night before and who had previously threatened to kill him in front of witnesses. Abbas managed to escape and searched for Nawal for she is the only witness to his innocence. Wahid offered to marry Nawal, but she evaded him and decided not to meet him again, because she lied to him about her job and understood that she was a teacher and did not tell him that she works as a singer in a hall. However, Maysa called Wahid and told him the truth, so he became more attached to her and married her despite the objection of his father, the Pasha, who then agreed. Abbas called Nawal and asked her to help him and testify that she had spent the night in his apartment and asked her to meet him in his apartment again to agree to surrender himself and her testimony in his favor, so she went to him behind her husband’s back, who watched her and doubted her behavior and thought she is in an affair with Abbas, and he divorced her instantly. Nawal was unable to meet Abbas because the police arrested him, and when Wahid learned of Abbas’ story, he agreed for Nawal to testify in his favour, despite the scandal that this caused him, and indeed Nawal went to court and acquitted Abbas and testified that she had spent that night with him, so the court acquitted him and the real killer was arrested, and Abbas swore to Wahid that his wife is honest and that she was a victim of misfortune. Finally, Wahid remarried Nawal and remained happily ever after.

Crew

edit

Cast

edit

Primary cast

edit

Supporting cast

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Armes, Roy (2008). Dictionary of African Filmmakers. Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-35116-6. Archived from the original on 2022-09-25. Retrieved 2022-09-25.
  2. ^ Bazzoli, Maria Silvia; Gariazzo, Giuseppe (2001). Onde del desiderio: il cinema egiziano dalle origini agli anni Settanta (in Italian). Torino film festival, Associazione cinema giovani. ISBN 978-88-88357-01-0. Archived from the original on 2022-09-25. Retrieved 2022-09-25.
  3. ^ Al Lailu lana | Film | 1949 (in Polish), archived from the original on 2019-12-12, retrieved 2022-09-25
  4. ^ Sadoul, Georges (1966). The Cinema in the Arab Countries. Interarab Centre of Cinema & Television. Archived from the original on 2022-09-25. Retrieved 2022-09-25.
  5. ^ "Night is Ours, The [al-leil lana] (1949) - (Sabah) Egyptian film poster F, EX $145 *". www.musicman.com. Archived from the original on 2021-07-26. Retrieved 2022-09-25.
  6. ^ قاسم, محمود. موسوعة الأفلام العربية - المجلد الثاني (in Arabic). E-Kutub Ltd. ISBN 978-1-78058-322-8. Archived from the original on 2022-09-25. Retrieved 2022-09-25.
edit