A female Lyft driver has to navigate the night shift in NYC while waiting to hear life or death news from Syria.A female Lyft driver has to navigate the night shift in NYC while waiting to hear life or death news from Syria.A female Lyft driver has to navigate the night shift in NYC while waiting to hear life or death news from Syria.
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Featured reviews
Salam is a great short film with two strong female characters! Good story, great actors and strong cinematography. Highly recommended.
Salam is a moving story that delves into the short-lived yet profound connection between two women with vasty different backgrounds who both happen to be in the midst of their own crises. The film depicts a beautifully nuanced portrayal of a muslim immigrant rarely seen in American media. Although brief, the depth of the encounter speaks on the universality of fear and love.
A thoughtful and powerfully acted film. Claire Fowler successfully communicates vulnerability and strength through the universal language of humanity.
Salam Short Film
Directed by Claire Fowler
Starring Leslie Bibb, Hana Chamoun, Jessica Damouni, Julie Baroody, Khaled Al Maleh, Dean Masoud
Short Film Review by Elia Short Films Festival
Only the wait of the unknown can make those who are absent seem present. But what if the absent from here becomes really absent from now? One phone call was all it takes to make a shift in Salam's (Hana Chamoun) life. She is a taxi driver living with her brother, his wife, and children in Brooklyn, the aftermath of the circumstances in Syria forced her to find a new home away from her parents and husband Mousa. The story begins on one of salam's night shifts, a call from her brother informs her that her husband Mousa suffered a dangerous head injury due to bombing in Syria, and asking her to return home and await further news. However, Salam chooses to work instead as a distraction from her worried thoughts, she receives an order from Audrey (Leslie Bibb) and agrees since she needs the money to support her family, Audrey seems distressed as Salam, so they bond over coffee, and Odrey decides to return to her mother's house, on the way Odrey receives a call and decides to return to Brooklyn, Meanwhile Salam receives a call reassuring her about those who are absent yet present. It's fair to say that (Claire Fowler) succeeded in creating "Salam" as a Strong, yet weak, quite and soothing main character. Her expressive use of colors and lighting to represent Salam's emotional state, projecting on to the viewer the difficulty of waiting and the state of those who wait. A beautifully woven fabric of camera, lighting, production design and editing, that Fowler professionally and masterly produced.
Directed by Claire Fowler
Starring Leslie Bibb, Hana Chamoun, Jessica Damouni, Julie Baroody, Khaled Al Maleh, Dean Masoud
Short Film Review by Elia Short Films Festival
Only the wait of the unknown can make those who are absent seem present. But what if the absent from here becomes really absent from now? One phone call was all it takes to make a shift in Salam's (Hana Chamoun) life. She is a taxi driver living with her brother, his wife, and children in Brooklyn, the aftermath of the circumstances in Syria forced her to find a new home away from her parents and husband Mousa. The story begins on one of salam's night shifts, a call from her brother informs her that her husband Mousa suffered a dangerous head injury due to bombing in Syria, and asking her to return home and await further news. However, Salam chooses to work instead as a distraction from her worried thoughts, she receives an order from Audrey (Leslie Bibb) and agrees since she needs the money to support her family, Audrey seems distressed as Salam, so they bond over coffee, and Odrey decides to return to her mother's house, on the way Odrey receives a call and decides to return to Brooklyn, Meanwhile Salam receives a call reassuring her about those who are absent yet present. It's fair to say that (Claire Fowler) succeeded in creating "Salam" as a Strong, yet weak, quite and soothing main character. Her expressive use of colors and lighting to represent Salam's emotional state, projecting on to the viewer the difficulty of waiting and the state of those who wait. A beautifully woven fabric of camera, lighting, production design and editing, that Fowler professionally and masterly produced.
Wonderful movie .. carries the advantages of a professional story .. And the way to narrate events going high
Did you know
- TriviaJudging from the Brooklyn-esque streetscape where Salam drops off her passenger Audrey after their round trip to Kerhonkson (Ulster County) NY, an Uber ride there and back would have cost $765.00, not including tip.
Details
- Runtime14 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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