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IMDbPro

Beyond Honor

  • 2004
  • R
  • 1h 41m
IMDb RATING
5.7/10
114
YOUR RATING
Beyond Honor (2004)
Drama

Beyond Honor is a heart-stopping, emotionally resonant portrayal of gender roles and the dynamics of power in a claustrophobic immigrant family living in Southern California.Beyond Honor is a heart-stopping, emotionally resonant portrayal of gender roles and the dynamics of power in a claustrophobic immigrant family living in Southern California.Beyond Honor is a heart-stopping, emotionally resonant portrayal of gender roles and the dynamics of power in a claustrophobic immigrant family living in Southern California.

  • Director
    • Varun Khanna
  • Writer
    • Varun Khanna
  • Stars
    • Wadie Andrawis
    • Mirelly Taylor
    • Laurel Melagrano
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.7/10
    114
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Varun Khanna
    • Writer
      • Varun Khanna
    • Stars
      • Wadie Andrawis
      • Mirelly Taylor
      • Laurel Melagrano
    • 8User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
    • 32Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos6

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    Top cast23

    Edit
    Wadie Andrawis
    • Mohammed Abdel-Karim
    Mirelly Taylor
    Mirelly Taylor
    • Sahira Abdel-Karim
    • (as Ruth Osuna)
    Laurel Melagrano
    • Noor Abdel-Karim
    Ryan Izay
    Ryan Izay
    • Samir Abdel-Karim
    Jason Smith
    Jason Smith
    • Brian
    • (as Jason David Smith)
    Carl Darchuk
    • Dr. Woods
    • (as Carl Darchuck)
    Avika
    • Little Sahira
    Albert Fam
    • Abd Rabu
    Eric Barr
    • Professor of Medicine
    Varun Khanna
    Varun Khanna
    • Medical Student Actor
    Abram Lewis-Rosenblum
    • Dancer
    Lauren Boyle
    • Medical Student Actor
    • (as Lauren Johnson)
    Ina Barrón
    Ina Barrón
    • Gennifer
    • (as Ina Barron)
    Ajay Vidure
    Ajay Vidure
    • Sunil
    Michelle Gunn
    Michelle Gunn
    • Dancer
    • (as Michelle Martin)
    Raj Bhatia
    • Rope Exercise Student
    Tamela Wilsey
    • Ms. Dougal
    Heba Leiff
    • Sahira's Aunt
    • Director
      • Varun Khanna
    • Writer
      • Varun Khanna
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews8

    5.7114
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    Featured reviews

    1fawadhaidary

    Fully biased movie!

    What a garbage movie did I watch. Varun Khanna or whoever wrote or made this movie seems they are completely ignorant about Islam. The values depicted in this movie are completely opposite and against what Islam teaches. You need educate well enough yourself about a religion before making such a NONSENSE movie. Don't confuse culture, ignorant practices with a religion. Like in India, does Hinduism really teach child marriages or keeping pure virginity? Again, this movie is full of absurd, nonsense and weak characters and completely biased targeting a religion unfairly. Please read Holy Quran accurate translation and judge this movie yourself!
    10wja-61808

    Exposes the dangers of extremism

    Although this is obviously a low-budget film, it masterfully presents the evils of Islamic extremism in the microcosm of a single household. The father, Mohammed, is a petty tyrant, lording it over his family and imposing his rigid views on everyone around him, always with the threat of violence looming behind his harsh words. As the story proceeds, the threatened violence becomes reality, and the tragedy unfolds. The director, Varu Khanna, is not judging all Muslims, but rather he is condemning intolerance in all its forms. He has succeeded admirably.
    10wenjersmn

    Excellent. Intelligent, emotionally charged, and brave.

    It is amazing to see the ignorance that surrounds the people of America. The world starts and ends with what we would like to believe. Bad only happens in far away lands; how can evil lurk amidst "us" - the land of civilized? The ignorance shown by the man who has posted the earlier column is resonant with the utter nonsense doled out to us by the media, academicians, and western feminists (the kid should spend more time watching slasher films instead of brave, intelligent and emotionally charged films like Beyond Honor).

    Bill Maher gets it right when he says that Americans have lost or are losing their edge in innovation in the world. The main reason is not just our ignorance but arrogance too.

    Beyond Honor filmmakers are in touch with the real world. The real world where children are sold off into slavery and women are punished for being women. Go to parts of Africa, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Middle East and then you will be puking your guts out when you see how women are treated – like animals. We can only look down upon the rest of the world as barbaric. What about our history? It was not too long ago that whites were lynching blacks, just for being black. Beyond Honor depicts the stark reality of humans at their worst. How else can you explain the genocide of 6 million Jews just for following their faith? The film has stayed with me all these days since I saw it in West Hills. It still makes my heart hurt, just like it did when I was a volunteer physician in Africa a decade ago. I have in my various travels around the world met people that you see in this film. This film is not just about some far away tribe in some other world. Beyond Honor analyzes concepts of honor that we would never even start to comprehend in our western minds.

    A brave and daring endeavor by the filmmakers, who are able to address culture clash as never been depicted before. Kudos!
    10rsweenee

    A must see film

    i stumbled upon this film on paddy's day in new york. clearly one of those moments when you walk into a theater not knowing what to expect. my wife and i were blown away by this film. we have never had a film have such an impact on me. my wife and i are still discussing it. the film opened our eyes. even though it is a fictional piece of work - it is so real. we were on the edge of our seats from the time we walked in. from the first scene till the end of the film - we could not take our eyes off. the acting is great, the story is mind blowing. the film is so real that the characters are still with us, actually haunting us. takes a lot of guts to make a real daring film. a must see.
    2noralee

    REVISED - Issues Presented Very Stereotypically and Tritely

    "Beyond Honor" takes extremely important and serious issues of the treatment of women and didactically reduces them to the stereotyped treatment of an R-rated after-school special.

    From the heavy-handed symbolic opening scene of an innocent little girl observing the ritual slaughter of a goat, debut writer/director Varun Khanna draws all his immigrant characters in the most simplistic outlines.

    While the central character of the striving medical student "Sahira" is dynamically brought to life by Mirelly Taylor, the rest of the acting seems to be done by stick figures. Wadie Andrawis's father loses any point of demonstrating specific issues of possible suppression of women in Arab immigrant communities to seeming to be at the very least a universal domestic abuser of his wife and children to seeming to be violently mentally deranged. Even the traditionally religious men in border-line agit prop Middle Eastern films as "The Circle (Dayereh)", "Kadosh" and "Osama" weren't presented so cartoonishly evil. By the end of the film the dialog pretty much consists of shouted obscenities.

    Though the same day I happened to see this film in a theater, "E.R." broadcast a very similar story line with a similarly obsessed revengefully religious brother driven partly by post-9/11 pressures and a blond boyfriend, that doesn't make this character any more human here, as he was equally poorly written, with an added twist of repressed sexuality spilling out into in ever more abusive ways.

    The traditional women are presented en masse with as eyes-only visible through their chadors or burkhas, or whatever they are called, though my understanding is that they wouldn't wear those indoors among family members.

    The climatically violent scene is presented like a slo-mo "Perils of Pauline" silent film confrontation.

    Though this film does a poor job of representing such a serious issue, it does tack on the end of the film facts and links about female genital mutilation. Over the past few years there have been many excellent films about the Middle-Eastern/South Asian-immigrant experience in the U.S., including issues for women. A much more effective and dramatic treatment about honor killings was a short I saw at the Tribeca Film Festival "In The Morning", directed by Danielle Lurie, which is evidently being used by non-profit organizations who are more effectively fighting such horrors than these unfortunately cardboard caricatures accomplish.

    (My original version of this review, posted 24 March 2006, offended someone. This has been revised 29 March 2008)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 17, 2006 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Cine02 Website
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Filming locations
      • Riverside, California, USA
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $6,437
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $1,114
      • Mar 19, 2006
    • Gross worldwide
      • $6,437
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 41m(101 min)
    • Color
      • Color

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