IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,1/10
3056
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Eine Mutter versucht, ihre Familie zu beschützen, während der Krieg wütet und ein Scharfschütze vor ihrem Haus auf der Lauer liegt. Diese nervenaufreibende Studie über das Leben in Damaskus ... Alles lesenEine Mutter versucht, ihre Familie zu beschützen, während der Krieg wütet und ein Scharfschütze vor ihrem Haus auf der Lauer liegt. Diese nervenaufreibende Studie über das Leben in Damaskus gewann auf der Berlinale den Publikumspreis.Eine Mutter versucht, ihre Familie zu beschützen, während der Krieg wütet und ein Scharfschütze vor ihrem Haus auf der Lauer liegt. Diese nervenaufreibende Studie über das Leben in Damaskus gewann auf der Berlinale den Publikumspreis.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
- Auszeichnungen
- 18 Gewinne & 9 Nominierungen insgesamt
Jihad Sleik
- Yazan
- (as Mohammad Jihad Sleik)
Ahmad Abu-Khdeir
- Brancardier 2
- (as Ahmad Khdeir)
Issan Dib
- Le premier brancardier 1
- (as Issam Dib)
Orwa Khultum
- Le deuxième homme 2
- (as Orwa Kulthoum)
Madjd Tarabay
- Halima and Samir's baby
- (as Majd Tarabay)
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I came out of the cinema about a half hour ago and still have not been able to utter a single word. So deeply was I moved by this film. It is a very topical picture because it gives us an insight into what people are going through in Syria. At the same time, it is a universal story of war and what becomes of humanity in times of great suffering. It could be any war, anywhere. In some senses, almost a Sartreian reflection on the human condition. Beautifully and powerfully acted. The cast is nothing short of amazing. The camera-work is just right, giving a real sense of urgency to the action but never overdoing it. The screenplay is tight, and the directing is sure. I could have done without the incidental music, but that's really nitpicking. All in all, a great piece of filmmaking and a film that is bound to become a classic.
28th STOCKHOLM INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL. DAY 4, NOV 11th 2017. Swedish premiere.
In an apartment in Damascus, in war-torn Syria, a matriarch is struggling, despite all odds, to keep her family and a neighbouring woman safe.
A Belgian-French-Lebanese co-production, "Insyriated" (2017), written and directed by Belgian cinematographer-turned-writer-director Philippe Van Leeuw, was shot in an apartment building in Beirut, Lebanon. With strong acting performances and well-balanced direction, this gripping drama is a feat of shattering realism.
In an apartment in Damascus, in war-torn Syria, a matriarch is struggling, despite all odds, to keep her family and a neighbouring woman safe.
A Belgian-French-Lebanese co-production, "Insyriated" (2017), written and directed by Belgian cinematographer-turned-writer-director Philippe Van Leeuw, was shot in an apartment building in Beirut, Lebanon. With strong acting performances and well-balanced direction, this gripping drama is a feat of shattering realism.
I've always heard about what's happening in Syria - or rather, what they wanted us to see. But this film showed me something different. Something real. Something painful.
It captured a single day in the life of a family whose daily routine has become a dance with fear fear of bombs, of rape, of death. Children crying in the background, a mother spinning like clockwork to keep order in a world without any.
This film doesn't just tell a story it breaks you. It makes you witness the strength of people who lived through a nightmare and survived. The cast embodied these real lives with heartbreaking honesty.
I didn't just watch the film. I felt it. And I won't forget it.
It captured a single day in the life of a family whose daily routine has become a dance with fear fear of bombs, of rape, of death. Children crying in the background, a mother spinning like clockwork to keep order in a world without any.
This film doesn't just tell a story it breaks you. It makes you witness the strength of people who lived through a nightmare and survived. The cast embodied these real lives with heartbreaking honesty.
I didn't just watch the film. I felt it. And I won't forget it.
'Insyriated' (its UK title), although not perfect, turned out to be one of the most unsettling (as it ought to be considering the subject matter) and powerful films seen in the cinema this year to me. It is a very good film, almost great in fact, that is deserving seemingly of a wider release.
Visually, 'Insyriated' is highly atmospheric and startling. The cinematography keeps the viewer constantly at the heart of the action and gives a large amount of urgency while not going over-the-top. The editing is taut and adds to 'Insyriated's' unsettling nature, as does, and even more so, the sound editing. The lighting is haunting without being too dark. The sets are suitably confined, effectively giving a sense of claustrophobia. Philippe Van Leeuw directs with assurance and control of the subject matter, being more successful as director than as writer.
Parts of the script are tight and provoking. The story is never dull and treats its subject with an unnerving quality that really wrecks the nerves. The horrors, tension and suspense are not dealt with excessively or sledge-hammer-like nor are they sugar-coated or trivialised. Yet it doesn't hold back and takes no prisoners, which was appropriate and throughout there is a clear sense of danger.
The characters seem real and their conflicts easy to identify with every step of the way, even when they make misjudged decisions they also come over as meaning well which stops the viewer from getting frustrated at them. A great cast makes this possible, with the best performances coming from Hiam Abbass, Diamand Abou Abboud and Juliette Navis. The stages of the film where the truth of the events (primarily the shooting) is discovered are particularly well acted.
For all those strengths, there are a couple of shortcomings with 'Insyriated'. While the script is generally tight and thought-provoking, there are times where it lacks nuance and subtlety which would have given the harrowing, hard-edged tone a little more dimension. But it's the score that is the biggest issue, very mawkish and far too low-key in instrumentation which creates a completely out of kilter tone with the atmosphere, when either a more robust, stirring approach was far more suitable, just as effective would have been for the film to have no score.
Overall, very good and almost great which it could easily have been with a little more nuance and a far more appropriate music score. 8/10 Bethany Cox
Visually, 'Insyriated' is highly atmospheric and startling. The cinematography keeps the viewer constantly at the heart of the action and gives a large amount of urgency while not going over-the-top. The editing is taut and adds to 'Insyriated's' unsettling nature, as does, and even more so, the sound editing. The lighting is haunting without being too dark. The sets are suitably confined, effectively giving a sense of claustrophobia. Philippe Van Leeuw directs with assurance and control of the subject matter, being more successful as director than as writer.
Parts of the script are tight and provoking. The story is never dull and treats its subject with an unnerving quality that really wrecks the nerves. The horrors, tension and suspense are not dealt with excessively or sledge-hammer-like nor are they sugar-coated or trivialised. Yet it doesn't hold back and takes no prisoners, which was appropriate and throughout there is a clear sense of danger.
The characters seem real and their conflicts easy to identify with every step of the way, even when they make misjudged decisions they also come over as meaning well which stops the viewer from getting frustrated at them. A great cast makes this possible, with the best performances coming from Hiam Abbass, Diamand Abou Abboud and Juliette Navis. The stages of the film where the truth of the events (primarily the shooting) is discovered are particularly well acted.
For all those strengths, there are a couple of shortcomings with 'Insyriated'. While the script is generally tight and thought-provoking, there are times where it lacks nuance and subtlety which would have given the harrowing, hard-edged tone a little more dimension. But it's the score that is the biggest issue, very mawkish and far too low-key in instrumentation which creates a completely out of kilter tone with the atmosphere, when either a more robust, stirring approach was far more suitable, just as effective would have been for the film to have no score.
Overall, very good and almost great which it could easily have been with a little more nuance and a far more appropriate music score. 8/10 Bethany Cox
My link http://wp.me/p2R05n-1bA to my blog review of Insyriated is here. It has a very well crafted dramatic take on war without indulging in political dirge. There are claustrophobic and surreal elements to it a bit like Under the Shadow. Holding up as a film made in Lebanon with the principals professionals the remainder of the cast are Syrian refugees. The plot is only over one day. Using a hand held camera it almost recruits you as another pair of eyes reaching into this compelling dark story.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe twenty-five-day shooting took place in an apartment building in the center of Beirut.
- SoundtracksDakhlak Ya Tayr El Werwar
Written by Elias Rahbani (SACEM)
(P) A. Chahine (SACEM)
Top-Auswahl
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsländer
- Offizielle Standorte
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- In Syria
- Drehorte
- Apartment building, Beirut, Libanon(apartment in Damascus)
- Produktionsfirmen
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
Box Office
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 273.873 $
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 25 Min.(85 min)
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.85 : 1
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