The story of prophet "Muhammad" and the delivery of the message of God "Allah."The story of prophet "Muhammad" and the delivery of the message of God "Allah."The story of prophet "Muhammad" and the delivery of the message of God "Allah."
Mona Wassef
- Hind
- (as Mouna Wasef)
Hamdy Gheith
- Abu Sofyan
- (as Hamdi Ghayth)
Mohamed El Arabi
- Ammar
- (as Mohamed Larbi)
Featured reviews
The movie is directed by Mustapha Akkad one of the pioneering Arabic directors, and to me that is enough. The story of Islam put in its best form on motion picture. I recommend this movie to every one of all ages; especially people that would like to know or get a better understanding of haw the religion of Islam started.
I am biased.. I am Muslim but to be fair from prospective of art this film hits all the aspects of masterpiece
The film directed and produced the best director in the history of Arab cinema, where he gave us a wonderful masterpiece, which is not understood by the world about the Arabs and Muslims for this I recommend watching even non-Muslims, It is indeed the best film in the history of Arab cinema.
10ThisCare
The Movie Was Great For Almost 4 Hours I Didn't Feel The Time At All, The Fights sections Was So Good At That Even Now After 4 Decades I Still Watch Them, The Movie Was About Some Of Prophet Mohammed(Peace Be Upon Him) Stories, Director Mustafa AL Akkad Tried To Give Us The Very Most Important Things That Happen In The Prophet Life, I Really Hop Some Someone Else Will Make A Great Movie Like This Talking About The Prophet Stories.
Chronicling the life & times of the founder of Islam, The Message is crafted in accordance with the religious beliefs & sensibilities when it comes to the depiction of the prophet who is neither seen nor heard but the story as a whole also serves as an informative historical account of the depicted era. A welcome introduction to the early history of Islamic faith, this 3½ hour religious epic is better than its English-language version.
Directed by Moustapha Akkad, the story covers how the religion originated, the persecution & exodus that followed and the final victory that paved way for Islam's future while establishing Mecca as the hub of the Muslim world. The film touches on the core teachings of Islam which isn't much different from other creeds. For an epic, it has the scope & scale but not the visual eye or cinematic flourish to realise it or make it appealing.
Despite being 30 mins longer than its English counterpart, the picture fares better in almost all aspects. It has better narrative flow, better pacing, plus the Arabic language lends authenticity of its own to the depicted setting, culture & lifestyle. Even the actors fit their roles better in this one. However, the issues I had with the other version are more or less present here too and the simplicity with which conflicts are resolved are at times facepalm-inducing.
Overall, The Message offers an easy enough understanding of Islam to acquaint everyone with its values & teachings but its simple-minded approach won't satisfy all. Still, for what it's worth, the film succeeds in bestowing the outside cultures an essential insight into the Islamic world & its origins, the guiding principles it operates on, and the legacy it has left behind in the modern world as evident in the closing moments. In short, an illuminating epic that's worth a shot.
Directed by Moustapha Akkad, the story covers how the religion originated, the persecution & exodus that followed and the final victory that paved way for Islam's future while establishing Mecca as the hub of the Muslim world. The film touches on the core teachings of Islam which isn't much different from other creeds. For an epic, it has the scope & scale but not the visual eye or cinematic flourish to realise it or make it appealing.
Despite being 30 mins longer than its English counterpart, the picture fares better in almost all aspects. It has better narrative flow, better pacing, plus the Arabic language lends authenticity of its own to the depicted setting, culture & lifestyle. Even the actors fit their roles better in this one. However, the issues I had with the other version are more or less present here too and the simplicity with which conflicts are resolved are at times facepalm-inducing.
Overall, The Message offers an easy enough understanding of Islam to acquaint everyone with its values & teachings but its simple-minded approach won't satisfy all. Still, for what it's worth, the film succeeds in bestowing the outside cultures an essential insight into the Islamic world & its origins, the guiding principles it operates on, and the legacy it has left behind in the modern world as evident in the closing moments. In short, an illuminating epic that's worth a shot.
Did you know
- TriviaAlthough broadly sharing the same film unit (director, editor, etc.), two different versions of the film (one in English and the other in Arabic), were shot simultaneously, scene by scene. Two completely different sets of actors shared the same set; once a scene had been established, one actor would play a character in one language, and then the whole scene reshot with his corresponding number speaking in the other language. The lone exception in the cast being Andre Morell who is credited as Abu-Talib in both versions. The main (English) version was released as "The Message", while the Arabic version became "Al-Risalah".
- Quotes
Narrator: If this Coran were revealed to a mount, it would collapse even off feared Allah, the Great, said the truth. The Prophet, elected official by Allah to carry what the mountains can not, is too great and inaccessible to be represented by a human. For that we will not see nor his image neither his voice nor his shade, throughout this film.
- ConnectionsAlternate-language version of Le message (1976)
- How long is The Message?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $4,360,000
- Gross worldwide
- $10,900,000
- Runtime
- 3h 27m(207 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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