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La conspiration du Caire

Titre original : Walad min al-Janna
  • 2022
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 6min
NOTE IMDb
6,9/10
8,7 k
MA NOTE
POPULARITÉ
1 337
17 118
La conspiration du Caire (2022)
Adam, the son of a fisherman is offered the privilege to study at the Al-Azhar University in Cairo, the center of power of Sunni Islam. Adam becomes a pawn in the conflict between Egypt's religious and political elites.
Lire trailer1:29
1 Video
33 photos
DrameThriller

Au premier jour de retour après les vacances d'été, le grand imam s'effondre et meurt devant ses étudiants dans une prestigieuse université du Caire. Cela marque le début d'une bataille d'in... Tout lireAu premier jour de retour après les vacances d'été, le grand imam s'effondre et meurt devant ses étudiants dans une prestigieuse université du Caire. Cela marque le début d'une bataille d'influence impitoyable pour prendre sa place.Au premier jour de retour après les vacances d'été, le grand imam s'effondre et meurt devant ses étudiants dans une prestigieuse université du Caire. Cela marque le début d'une bataille d'influence impitoyable pour prendre sa place.

  • Réalisation
    • Tarik Saleh
  • Scénario
    • Tarik Saleh
  • Casting principal
    • Tawfeek Barhom
    • Fares Fares
    • Mohammad Bakri
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,9/10
    8,7 k
    MA NOTE
    POPULARITÉ
    1 337
    17 118
    • Réalisation
      • Tarik Saleh
    • Scénario
      • Tarik Saleh
    • Casting principal
      • Tawfeek Barhom
      • Fares Fares
      • Mohammad Bakri
    • 30avis d'utilisateurs
    • 92avis des critiques
    • 72Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 5 victoires et 21 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:29
    Official Trailer

    Photos33

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    Rôles principaux53

    Modifier
    Tawfeek Barhom
    Tawfeek Barhom
    • Adam Taha
    Fares Fares
    Fares Fares
    • Colonel Ibrahim
    Mohammad Bakri
    Mohammad Bakri
    • General Al Sakran
    • (as Mohamad Bakri)
    Makram Khoury
    Makram Khoury
    • Blind Sheikh Negm
    • (as Makram J. Khoury)
    Mehdi Dehbi
    Mehdi Dehbi
    • Zizo
    Moe Ayoub
    • Suhby
    Sherwan Haji
    Sherwan Haji
    • Soliman
    Jalal Altawil
    Jalal Altawil
    • Cheikh Omar Beblawi
    Ramzi Choukair
    Ramzi Choukair
    • Sheikh Al Durani
    Samy Soliman
    • Adam's Father
    Ahmed Laissaoui
    Ahmed Laissaoui
    • Raed
    • (as Ahmed Lassaoui)
    Hassan El Sayed
    Hassan El Sayed
    • Village Imam
    • (as Hassan El-Sayed)
    Amr Mosad
    • Harun
    • (as Amr Musad)
    Mouloud Ayad
    • Nazim
    Ahmed Zaki
    • Yunes
    Abdulhamid Halaf
    • Ismael
    Rasambek Bukiew
    • Eslam
    Abduljabbar Alsuhili
    • Alasfour
    • Réalisation
      • Tarik Saleh
    • Scénario
      • Tarik Saleh
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs30

    6,98.7K
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    Avis à la une

    10abodawoudelmasry

    Outlawed in Egypt

    This movie has shaken Egypt to its very core, it has been deemed so provocative that it is BANNED. The director is Egyptian, the move is set in Cairo (yet filmed funnily enough in Istanbul because of the ban). It has yeilded award in the Cannes film festival, and it is simply put SUPERB.

    The camera is well used, the atmosphere build up is immensely satisfying. And it ultimately proves the old saying "Man will be free when the last King has been strangled with the last priests entrials"- This is a CULT movie in the making. Unfortunately you will never see this film in Egypt.
    5DoubleMaitre

    Poignant topic, poor execution

    Tarik Saleh put his hand on a timeless aspect of Egyptian politics: the power interplay between the political leaders (the military) and the religious figures (Al Azhar). Never has this sensitive issue been addressed before. Which is ironically the very reason why this movie fails.

    The reason why this issue was not addressed by Egyptian cinema (or "Hollywood-sur-Nil" as some used to call it back in its glamorous days) is simple: censorship. Egyptian moviemakers and actors would not be allowed to talk about this taboo. Indeed, this movie will not be played in Egyptian cinemas.

    The direct consequence is that only foreign moviemakers can get away with making a movie that tackles this sensitive issue. And this is where things go wrong.

    The movie - understandably - fails to capture any Egyptian essence. Dialogues are unnatural. Characters and attitudes are artificial. Add to this the fact that the cast is virtually Egyptian-free (for the reasons described above). They are therefore incapable of smoothing the dialogues into something that feels more natural.

    While Tarik Saleh is from Egyptian descent, it is obvious from this movie that his relation to Egypt is, alas, too tenuous to make a movie that delves so deep into Egyptian social, political and religious realities.

    Nevertheless, I am aware that my issue with this movie will only be shared by the Egyptian public. Therefore, to the extent that Tarik Saleh considers Boy from Heaven to be a a picture about Egypt by foreign filmmakers to foreign viewers, I would cut him some slack.

    Still, the movie is riddled with espionnage clichés. Whichever you can think of, you will find in Boy from Heaven. Egyptian classical music is played at unlikely places. Scene transitions are often abrupt, evidencing issues with the montage.

    More than once, the movie did feel like an average film school student's graduation project.
    8PedroPires90

    Society

    If there are certain films that we consume and extract everything they want to tell us at the moment it ends, there are others that have much to explore and understand between the lines. Cairo Conspiracy - previously called Boy From Heaven, a much more suitable title - is a political and religious thriller with some very clear messages but also a lot to read and extrapolate.

    The story is simple and seemingly contained. It tells us about a boy, Adam (Tawfeek Barhom), who receives a letter that will change his life: he has been accepted at the prestigious Al-Azhar University in Cairo, Egypt. As soon as he arrives, the Grand Imam of al-Azhar dies suddenly, and a power struggle to replace him begins. For someone with little knowledge of the culture in question and what this position actually represents - believe me, this is much more than a mere college dean in the US - it may seem strange why this is such a coveted place. Why do some people kill? Why do some people give their lives? I confess that when the film ended, I researched the topic a bit more, however, the film does a good job of showing us the importance of what we are talking about here, involving various religious fabrics - more or less dangerous - and the government itself. And where does Adam fit in? Well, Adam, who until then was little more than "the fisherman's son," finds himself involuntarily involved in the centre of these intrigues, conspiracies, and dangerous games.

    Tawfeek Barhom - whom I did not know before - has a powerful interpretation as Adam. A young man who still needs to get to know himself but has little time to look at himself. He doesn't always do the right thing. He doesn't always know what to do. He doesn't always find it easy to express what he feels. He is a confused teenager, like any teenager, but he cannot afford to remain in that state for too long. He is forced to become a man. Right now.

    Man. If there's one thing that this movie doesn't lack, it's men. It's almost impossible to see a woman in this toxic and patriarchal world. When any attention is given to a woman, it's to expose the way she's treated by society and the more powerful. It's to show us that she should remain without opinion, without identity, submissive and obedient to what life - men - enable her to do. I may be using a lot of words on something that isn't the central theme of this film, but I feel that Tarik Saleh's choice is intentional. Even when he shows us certain family environments of characters who should be dear to us, the writer and filmmaker gives us clues about what he thinks about the concept of family and how genders have well-defined roles within society.

    Through this, we can also extract much of what this film wants to say about its central themes. We're talking about a society that merges with its religiosity. Everyone's roles converge with Islam, whether we're talking about a more radical or more open side of it. And when they diverge in the customs and teachings passed down by the written and spoken word, it invariably serves to expose all the hypocrisy of a system that only survives because it enables a few to dominate and control everything and everyone. When Saleh shows us daily hygienic rituals specific to religion, he shows us people cleaning themselves of all their sins, all their anxieties, and all their filth. The filth that leaves marks on the outside and the filth that leaves marks on the inside. And, no matter how much goodwill and people want to do better, there are always stronger forces that could take them down undesired paths, paths that don't represent what that - or any other - religion stands for on paper.

    When it comes to power dynamics, Cairo Conspiracy is fascinating. It is so when it demonstrates the calculated relationships of those who know a lot about this life. It is even more fascinating when, gradually, it reveals who are, in fact, the main players of this game and who are their pawns. There are pawns for all tastes. This is particularly visible in the figure of the investigator we follow more closely - Ibrahim, very well portrayed, full of nuances by the already well-known Fares Fares - who has his own pawns and is also a pawn of someone else.

    There are also other major pawns. Those who should not even be there. I'm talking about the students of that University who, on one side or the other of the board, have been used in power and backstage wars, being manipulated for personal purposes. This is also a way of keeping society the way it is, indoctrinating - grooming is the right word - from an early age, reaching those most susceptible and feeding the system itself.

    Cairo Conspiracy may seem, at times, a cold film. It is a film with no completely right sides or characters doing what we are used to see in Hollywood heroes. But do not be fooled. When it criticizes the functioning of a society, it is not pushing us away from its people. It acknowledges the cynicism but also believes in individuals and the impact that small choices can have. It is not asking for war. It is shouting for help. It is shouting for change. The change of men.
    7brentsbulletinboard

    A Solid Work That Could Use More of an Edge

    When the elderly Grand Imam of Cairo's prestigious Al-Azhar University passes away suddenly, a scramble ensues over the appointment of his replacement, one that involves the maneuverings of various vested interests from religious fundamentalists to political pragmatists to devoutly spiritual purists. But who will ultimately take over? That depends on the efforts of a young new student who becomes caught up in this power struggle, the pious son of a fisherman who's unwittingly recruited as a state security informant to infiltrate a group of academic ideological extremists. This slowburn thriller (sometimes a little too slow for its own good, especially in the middle) draws on this scenario to examine the diverse dynamics of Egyptian politics and religion, especially the often-tenuous relationship between the two, as played out through the internal (though publicly high-profile) workings of this long-established, well-respected educational institution. Writer-director Tarek Saleh's latest is a finely acted, capably made production (a noteworthy accomplishment given that the controversial filmmaker's work had to be shot outside of Egypt), though it occasionally lacks the gripping tension needed to give the picture's narrative the kind of dramatic heft that an offering like this requires, especially considering the high stakes involved in this story. While this Cannes Film Festival award winner for best screenplay is a work of fiction and said to poignantly reflect the prevailing conditions found in these institutions, the script, pacing and overall tone could have stood to be less subtle and more pointedly compelling. Indeed, "Cairo Conspiracy" is a suitably attention-holding watch with a solid underlying premise, but it would have been better if it had been a little less conventional and wielded a more pronounced edge.
    8dakjets

    A very good alternative to mainstream cinema

    Boy From Heaven is a watchable, exciting film where the action is set in Egypt and at the religious Al-Azhar University. The main character Adam, brilliantly played by Tawfeek Barhom gets a place at this university. He gives up his life as a fisherman and starts his studies. The film then takes a very surprising turn, becoming a suspense film, a thriller in an environment that is rarely depicted on film. Swedish Fares Fares has the other lead role, and together with Barhom they give life to the main characters in the film.

    At a time when mainstream film is almost everything that gets a mention and that "everyone" must see, it is liberating to see such a film of this quality.

    I would like to see more of Fares Fares and Tawfeek Barhom, and director Tarik Saleh has already shown that he can make quality films, both dramas and now thrillers.

    Give this and other films that aren't necessarily on everyone's lips a chance. They give us diversity and very good entertainment.

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    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

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    • Anecdotes
      A few days before the shooting in Egypt for Le Caire Confidentiel (2017) was supposed to take place, director Tarik Saleh was publicly removed from the country and told not to come back. As a result, that movie was shot in Casablanca, Morocco. As he's still persona non grata in Egypt, he couldn't shoot La conspiration du Caire (2022) there, thus despite being set in Cairo, the film was actually shot in Istanbul, Turkey, mostly in the Süleymanye mosque.
    • Connexions
      Featured in Il était une fois...: La conspiration du Caire (2024)

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    FAQ

    • How long is Cairo Conspiracy?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 26 octobre 2022 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Suède
      • France
      • Finlande
      • Danemark
    • Sites officiels
      • Atmo Production (Sweden)
      • Bufo (Finland)
    • Langue
      • Arabe
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Boy from Heaven
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Istanbul, Turquie
    • Sociétés de production
      • Atmo Production
      • Memento Films
      • Bufo
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 6 500 000 € (estimé)
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 4 867 691 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      2 heures 6 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
    • Rapport de forme
      • 2.39 : 1

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