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Ebn meen fel mogtamaa

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Wikipedia article






'Ebn meen fel mogtamaa' (, lit. The Son of a Local Man) is an Egyptian drama film released in 1979. It was directed by Hassan al-Imam, is written by Mohamed Moustapha Sami-, and stars Mohamed Tharwat, Mona Gabr, and Huda Sultan. The storys premise starts with Hajji Ibrahim al-Halawani, who marries the maid who bears his child and leaves all his inheritance to that son named Hamada, angering elder sons Khalil and Khamis, who to kill their father, frame the maid, and leave Hamada to the wolves. The film premiered in Egyptian theaters on May 31, 1979.

Cast



* Mohamed Tharwat (Hamada al-Halawani, youngest son of Hajji Ibrahim Al-Halawani and Firdaws)

* Mona Gabr (Souad, daughter of Tafaida al-Halawani)

* Hoda Sultan (Firdaws, Hajji Ibrahim al-Halawanis servant and wife)

* Salah Mansour (Younes al-Saftawi)

* Hussein al-Imam (Khalil al-Halawani)

* Hadi el-Gayar (Khamis al-Halawani)

* Ibrahim al-Shami (Hajji Ibrahim Al-Halawani)

* Nahed Samir (Tafaida al-Halawani, Hajjs cousin and Souads mother)

* Ragaa Youssef (friend of Firdaws)

* Mahmoud Rashad (orphanage director)

* Haridi Iman (Uncle Haridi)

* Ahlam Helmy

* Madiha Selim

* Mokhtar al-Sayed

* Samia Ahmed

* Abdel Moneim El Nimr

* Hiam Abdel Latif

Synopsis



Hajji Ibrahim Al-Halawani (Ibrahim al-Shami), owner of the Al-Maks tannery in Alexandria, is disappointed in his sons Khalil (Hussein al-Imam) and Khamis (Hadi el-Gayar), for their failure to graduate from school and join the family business. Lonely and dreaming of a son and worthy advisor-successor, he falls in love with his servant Firdaws (Hoda Sultan), who bears him a son named Hamada. Hajji keeps threatening to bequeath his wealth to the golden boy Hamada, but the enraged Khalil incites Khamis to poison Hajjs food with arsenic and frame Firdaws, succeeding on both counts with Hamada in their clutches and Firdaws imprisoned for twenty years.

Khalil orders Khamis to take Hamada to Cairo and abandon him in the crowd. In the Al-Hussain neighborhood, Khamis leaves Hamada but watches him cautiously, until a teacher named Younes al-Saftawi (Salah Mansour) finds him and takes him home to the Al-Jamaliah neighborhood. Quickly realizing that Hamada has no family with good intentions remaining, al-Saftawi takes him to an orphanage and pledges to visit regularly.

Hamada (Mohamed Tharwat) grows up in the orphanage and joins its Conservatory, where he excels at music and falls in love with his colleague Souad (Mona Gabr), while Khalil and Khamis squander their wealth on wine, women, and gambling as the tannerys debts mount. They are ultimately forced to sell the business to pay down the debts, and the buyer is none other than Tafaida al-Halawani, Hajjis cousin and Souads mother. Khlail ends up paralyzed and begging in front of Alexandrias Abu al-Abbas al-Mursi Mosque, while Khamis makes a living as a squeegee man and panhandling on the streets. Firdaws is released after 15 years in prison, but she is rejected by Tafaida and therefore stays with a friend (Ragaa Youssef). Inquiring about her sons whereabouts, she hears from Khamis that he is with Younes, who is on Hajj. Hamada asks Tafaida for her daughter Souads hand in marriage, but she refuses, so Hamada summons Younes to advocate on his behalf. Firdaws encounters Younes on return from Hajj, and he leads her to Hamadas graduation party at the Conservatory, at which she reunites with her son and meets Tafaida and Souad; Hamada, who just prior got a note from Younes not to seek him again, is overjoyed at the reunion.

Production



Actor Salah Mansour died during filming on January 19, 1979, requiring director Hassan al-Imam to edit down his role in the film. Mansour was admitted to the hospital in the Agouza neighborhood of Cairo and spent his last days beside his wife and his eldest son Majdi. According to her, his last words were Do not cry, for I have lived my life and hate to see tears in your eyes, which I will not be able to behold after I die. He was 56, and his widow was granted an unusually large pension given their modest means from President Anwar Sadat.

Reception



Mahmoud Kassem argued in his 2018 book ' ' (The Musical Film in Egyptian Cinema) that

Ebn meen fel mogtamaa marked a turning point in Egyptian film musicals, in which director Hassan al-Imam tried to launch a new generation of singers to replace the late Abdel Halim Hafez [who died in 1979]. Mohamed Tharwat, in his film debut, seemed a promising candidate to relaunch al-Imams formula in a modern context. However, the film was a box-office disappointment, and Tharwat soon left the silver screen for television.


Nevertheless, songs from the score like "' '" (Oh, Hama, I Have No Protection But You) were popular.


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