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IMDbPro

Much Loved

  • 2015
  • 12
  • 1h 44m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
3.2K
YOUR RATING
Loubna Abidar in Much Loved (2015)
A group of women in Morocco make a living as prostitutes in a culture that is very unforgiving toward women in that profession.
Play trailer1:57
1 Video
6 Photos
Drama

A group of women in Morocco make a living as prostitutes in a culture that is very unforgiving toward women in that profession.A group of women in Morocco make a living as prostitutes in a culture that is very unforgiving toward women in that profession.A group of women in Morocco make a living as prostitutes in a culture that is very unforgiving toward women in that profession.

  • Director
    • Nabil Ayouch
  • Writer
    • Nabil Ayouch
  • Stars
    • Loubna Abidar
    • Asmaa Lazrak
    • Halima Karaouane
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    3.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Nabil Ayouch
    • Writer
      • Nabil Ayouch
    • Stars
      • Loubna Abidar
      • Asmaa Lazrak
      • Halima Karaouane
    • 14User reviews
    • 39Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 4 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:57
    Trailer

    Photos5

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    Top cast19

    Edit
    Loubna Abidar
    Loubna Abidar
    • Noha
    Asmaa Lazrak
    Asmaa Lazrak
    • Randa
    Halima Karaouane
    Halima Karaouane
    • Soukaina
    Sara Elhamdi Elalaoui
    • Hlima
    Abdellah Didane
    • Said
    Danny Boushebel
    Danny Boushebel
    • Ahmad…
    Carlo Brandt
    Carlo Brandt
    • Jean-Louis…
    Hamza Arts
    Abdullah Bakhsh
    Ayoub El Ahmadi
    Ennaamane El Haulaili
    • Katib…
    Amine Ennaji
    • Inspecteur principal…
    Yousuf Al Idrissi
    • Client Saoudien-Saudi client
    Muhammad Amine Jadil
    • Osama
    Aytl Jensen
    Fatima Al Marzooqi
    Camélia Montassere
    • Le client de Randa…
    Mohamed Rezqi
    • Taxi driver
    • Director
      • Nabil Ayouch
    • Writer
      • Nabil Ayouch
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews14

    6.23.2K
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    Featured reviews

    8laurent-martenot

    Intelligent movie

    The movie is intelligent because it is balanced and accurately portrays scenes of prostitution without ever trying to take a binary stance. All actresses perform very well, in touch with the realism of the movie. It is a great insight into a part of the Moroccan life, and a mirror of our world, even when some would rather deny it exists.
    8Blue-Grotto

    Surrounded and Alone

    To be surrounded and yet be alone. To be loved and yet be invisible. To be cast away even as you are embraced. Welcome to the life of a Moroccan prostitute. From the testimonies of 200 real-life sex workers, Nabil Ayouch defied censorship to provide a fascinating, intimate and luminous glimpse into the Moroccan underworld. The story follows the fictional yet realistic lives of four women caught up in a passive- aggressive world. Bribing the police, projecting beautiful yet fabricated images and living on the edge of a knife, they turn to each other in order to live. It is beguiling to see the dark side of Morocco and witness these surreal lives that are lonely and solitary even as they are crowded with attention and "love." The acting is capable yet the story and characters could use just a little more depth. Seen at the Toronto International Film Festival 2015.
    3zkzuber

    Khan Reviews

    Numbers of movies are made around the world on prostitutes and this one is not exceptional. Nude scenes are easily used in such movies in the name of creativity to get eye balls. If makers of such movies are truly sensitive to the subject they need to make it without vulgar dialogues and scenes.
    7josemanuelh

    excelent movie about a tough matter in a tough country

    No suprise this film was never showed in its country, I even find it difficult to understand how it could be made, it shows well how things work there, how every public servant is on sale and prone to abuse the weak, and the extreme hypochresy of societe about sex, prostitution and overall the clients

    there is a scene at the police station than may well represent the whole picture of the movie, I will not explain to avoid spoilers

    great acting most of the time and very well direction also, a must see if you are into exploring good movies outside the mainstream.
    8ElMaruecan82

    An eye-opener victim of judgmental blindness...

    One can easily see some good 'bad publicity' in the controversy surrounding "Much Loved" and its theatrical ban from Morocco, but it also lead to violent attacks against its main star Lubna Abidar, as if reality had overshadowed fiction, which says a lot.

    I'm Moroccan and I avoided the film for a series of wrong reasons that seemed right at that time. My brother warned me that it was an exercise in pornography and shock for the sake of shocking. I suspected Nabil Ayouch made a deliberately graphic film, orchestrating the very polemic it caused while shielding his marketing ambitions with "cinema verité" and Abidar was the sacrificial lamb. As if things weren't bad enough for Arabs in 2015, did we need a film to highlight our own hypocrisy with the taboo of sex and prostitution? That's how I was thinking, failing to realize that if Abidar was treated like a wh**** , that totally justified a film about women constantly regarded as below the standards of human dignity.

    The film doesn't dignify prostitution but exposes it in its naked (or half-naked) opening with a long conversation that sets the tone. The subtitles do their jobs al by telling you what they say and they don't sugarcoat the profanities. However they might affect a Moroccan viewer who'd never hear a girl use these terms in society. I remembered my cousin telling me that boys have no idea how girls talk when they're together, I was shocked at the thought that they used the same words to define anatomical attributes, but hey, what was I expecting?. As Abidar's character Noha tells her chauffeur : "do you expect us to talk in poetry?".

    But there's more beyond the first verbal shock, these girls talk about their customers and seem to enjoy the moment because just for once, men become the objects ... of mockeries and laughs. You can tell that these conversations have a sort of cathartic effect and operate like a little pep talk before action, when their chauffeur Said, played effectively by a laconic Abdellah Didane drives them to a nightclub without paying attention. It's a movie about sex workers and naturally, they don't operate by themselves, they know cab drivers, bouncers, barmen, cops and like in Scorsese's "Casino", we see all the ramifications of the underworld.

    The first act culminates in an extended orgy with a group of inebriated Saudis, there's no need describing every detail but while I was watching these girls humiliating themselves, shaking their bottoms, playing with their bodies, I was thinking "why would anyone dismiss this film?" "how could it show that reality otherwise?". No 'good' citizen is aware of the existence of these practices, and it's a long overdue wake-up call for Moroccan society to realize the collateral damages of tourism. I'm sad that one of the reputations that Moroccan girls brought to themselves was how 'easy' they are, making a city like Marrakesh the Mecca of ... and yes, I'm censoring myself.

    But Ayouch avoids the victim card and acknowledges that for some girl it's a choice driven by economical needs but a choice nevertheless, if they want to leave the great life or open a business (a former pro opened a hair salon after making money in the whole Middle-East... and she wasn't a housemaid). These girls have ambitions and personalities of their own, their solidarity constantly challenged by arguments about money, rent, and sharing the orange juicer. If Abidar has the most substantial role as Noha who brought shame to her house and let her son leaving with her mother, her arc is perhaps the most heartbreaking and overarches the calvary endured by these girls.

    There's Halima Kairaouane as Randa who's got a boyfriend as a street bum and gives herself for free, showing that sex isn't always a matter of money, she's the most capable of love as implied with her infatuation with a Saudi client... but the romance will turn rapidly sour in a way that finds an eerie echo with the aggression of Abidar. And there's Asmaa Lazrak as Randa whose dream is to go to Spain. It's hard to have four substantial characters and her character never rally pays off, except for a moment when she has her first time with another woman and I didn't understand Ayouch's choice to cut it, since we never really see how that affected her.

    The great addition however is the rural pregnant girl who is totally unglamorous and vulgar and sells her body for bags of vegetables, she's the target of her friends' mockeries but she knows how to put them in their place. It's one of these last-minute characters who gives another dimension to a film. Once the quartet is formed, there's a sense of cohesion and completeness, we see these girls sticking together and understand why prostitution could never stop to exist and any woman can fall into this... and condemn herself to a social ban, along with homosexuals (a subject the film hovers on)... ironically, men get away with it... and yet, they're only the demand that makes the supply.

    I liked the film better than I thought, first the performances were flawless and didn't just involve dancing and lascive positions. Secondly Ayouch has a way to express many things through dancing: sometimes, it looks like fun, sometimes it's too forced not to look like a personal downfall à la 'Requiem for a Dream'. The film reminded me these girls dressed like Sharon Stone in hotels where I spent vacation with my family. A few years later, I saw them with the hotel bar manager while I was only playing pool.

    And if I ashamed that I could anticipate that the two French tourists who thought they would have the girls because they paid the drink, would get nothing but I feel more ashamed to have judged the film before watching it, it was insightful, dark, shocking, humorous and surprisingly moving.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Nail Ayouch interviewed hundreds of prostitutes when preparing the writing of the script.
    • Soundtracks
      Tell Me How You Feel
      (Morgane Gonnachon/Mike Kourtzer)

      Performed by Morgane

      Keyboards, piano: Mike Kourtzer

      (c) XKS Publishing, Cercle Rouge Productions, tour droits réservés (p)

      2015 Cercle Rouge Productions, avec l'aimable autorisation de XKS

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Much Loved?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 16, 2015 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • France
      • Morocco
    • Languages
      • Arabic
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Сильно любимая
    • Filming locations
      • Marrakech, Morocco
    • Production companies
      • Les Films du Nouveau Monde
      • New District
      • Barney Production
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,293,716
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 44 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 16 : 9

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