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IMDbPro

We Are Four Lions

Original title: Four Lions
  • 2010
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
89K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,887
299
Nigel Lindsay, Kayvan Novak, Riz Ahmed, and Adeel Akhtar in We Are Four Lions (2010)
Follow the misadventures of a group of British Islamic fundamentalists intent on sacrificing themselves for Allah.
Play trailer2:15
3 Videos
47 Photos
Dark ComedySatireComedyCrimeDrama

Four incompetent British terrorists from Sheffield, set out to train for and commit an act of terror.Four incompetent British terrorists from Sheffield, set out to train for and commit an act of terror.Four incompetent British terrorists from Sheffield, set out to train for and commit an act of terror.

  • Director
    • Christopher Morris
  • Writers
    • Christopher Morris
    • Sam Bain
    • Jesse Armstrong
  • Stars
    • Will Adamsdale
    • Riz Ahmed
    • Adeel Akhtar
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    89K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,887
    299
    • Director
      • Christopher Morris
    • Writers
      • Christopher Morris
      • Sam Bain
      • Jesse Armstrong
    • Stars
      • Will Adamsdale
      • Riz Ahmed
      • Adeel Akhtar
    • 219User reviews
    • 254Critic reviews
    • 68Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 BAFTA Award
      • 9 wins & 24 nominations total

    Videos3

    Four Lions
    Trailer 2:15
    Four Lions
    Four Lions
    Trailer 2:04
    Four Lions
    Four Lions
    Trailer 2:04
    Four Lions
    "She's got a beard" from Four Lions
    Clip 1:53
    "She's got a beard" from Four Lions

    Photos47

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    + 42
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    Top cast32

    Edit
    Will Adamsdale
    Will Adamsdale
    • Alex
    Riz Ahmed
    Riz Ahmed
    • Omar
    Adeel Akhtar
    Adeel Akhtar
    • Faisal
    Kayvan Novak
    Kayvan Novak
    • Waj
    Nigel Lindsay
    Nigel Lindsay
    • Barry
    Preeya Kalidas
    Preeya Kalidas
    • Sofia
    Mohamad Akil
    • Mahmood
    • (as Mohammad Aqil)
    Craig Parkinson
    Craig Parkinson
    • Matt
    Karl Seth
    • Uncle Imran
    Waleed Elgadi
    Waleed Elgadi
    • Khalid
    • (as William El-Gardi)
    Alex Macqueen
    Alex Macqueen
    • Malcolm Storge MP
    Shameem Ahmad
    Shameem Ahmad
    • Chairwoman
    Arsher Ali
    Arsher Ali
    • Hassan
    Julia Davis
    Julia Davis
    • Alice
    Wasim Zakir
    • Ahmed
    Jonathan Maitland
    Jonathan Maitland
    • Newsreader
    • (as Jonny Maitland)
    Marcus Garvey
    Marcus Garvey
    • Marathon Policeman
    Darren Boyd
    Darren Boyd
    • Sniper
    • Director
      • Christopher Morris
    • Writers
      • Christopher Morris
      • Sam Bain
      • Jesse Armstrong
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews219

    7.388.8K
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    Featured reviews

    7rooee

    More than a meow

    With The Day Today and its more acerbic follow-up Brasseye, supreme satirist Chris Morris made a mockery of the madness of the popular media by saying what he saw. It was funny because it could have been true. With Four Lions, Morris's focus is no longer on the manipulator, but rather the manipulated. Yet by presenting this jihad suicide squad as a group of bumbling misfits, chugging along the road to apotheosis in a car fitted with dodgy "Jewish spark plugs", it's still about the madness – here, the madness of a cracked ideology believed in mostly because it's made up as it goes along.

    This is not really a film about Islam, or even religious fundamentalism, but identity. Omar (an excellent Riz Ahmed) speaks fluently about the "Church of McDonald's" and Western imperialism, and yet he's at the centre of a comfortable, suburban, upper working class family unit. Hassan (Arsher Ali) is an awkward, gangly virgin with a bone to pick with his Media Studies teacher. Barry (Nigel Lindsay, who some might remember playing a terrorist of a different creed in HBO's Rome) is white.

    For all their misadventures, there's a genuine tenderness and loyalty between these "soldiers". This is a side of Morris we've rarely seen before – an emotional spine that raises the film far above what could have resembled a series of sketches or, worse, a reel of better outtakes. Perhaps this is the film's greatest success: bringing its director out of the satirical shadows and into the comedy spotlight, and proving there's a heart to go with that clever head.
    7jamesgill-1

    A ludicrous pageant of ineptitude... a 'How-Not-To Guide' to martyrdom

    Like Charlie Chaplin's Hitler, Chris Morris' 'Four Lions' shows that no subject can escape comic scrutiny; humour always seems to find the ability to expose the ridiculous in otherwise appalling situations. This satirical black comedy vents its disgust at the pseudo-morality of suicide bombing, whilst managing to portray its terrorists with an affection that allows the audience an unexpected emotional attachment with these supposed figures of violence.

    The film follows a terrorist cell of blundering, inept, and impossibly stupid would-be suicide bombers on their quest towards martyrdom – we follow them failing miserably in a Pakistan training camp, trying to run through sheep fields whilst carrying bags of explosives, attaching bombs to crows, all the time creating a chaotic 'blooper' reel of attempted martyrdom videos. These suicide bombers are not the feared assassins of popular imagination, but absurd and easily led dupes who encourage laughter and ridicule – and significantly, in the end, pity.

    The comedy of 'Four Lions' lies in the power of its bathos: the film reduces the dreaded spectre of suicide bombing to a ludicrous pageant of ineptitude. It's a film with fast laughs and dim wit in abundance, an absurd 'How Not-To Guide' to martyrdom.

    However, the audience cannot help but feel pity for the characters as their plot reaches its climax. There is a sad inevitability to the group's last moments together; despite the horror of what the bombers are planning, the audience has been lulled into sympathising with their situation. The sadness of the film comes with the audience's realisation that these characters are regular, likable, funny, naive people – they are not monsters in themselves, but made monstrous by their susceptibility to absurd, immoral teachings.

    The lead character Omar's interactions with his wife and young son are painful in their twisted depiction of the ideal family unit. At one point Omar (played by Riz Ahmed) tells his son a bedtime story about 'Simba's Jihad'. It is a scene that is touching, funny and uncomfortable all at once, a reflection of our responses to the film as a whole.

    'Four Lions' is provocative in its comic parody of an emotional subject, but there is never any sense that it wishes to be deliberately inflammatory. Instead, the story is told with warmth and sharp humour; it offers us a fine concoction of derision and sympathy, pulling at our affections whilst cutting the terrifying down to the clownish.

    James Gill ------ Find more reviews, news and previews at www.singleadmission.co.uk
    9destroy-apathy

    both hilarious comedy and contemporary social commentary

    The film can be approached from two angles; as a comedy and as an important contemporary cultural text. As a comedy it succeeded beyond expectations. Part of the pleasure surely came from the spectacle of the event; a sold out screening with cast and crew present along with regional cultural references that resonated infectiously with many in the audience, but this can take nothing away from the many levels of comedy at work within this film. There were elements of overacted screwball comedy; there were underplayed facial expressions and reactions that added a wealth of character and personality to the comedy; further still, there were elaborately constructed situational set pieces. All these elements along with explosively dynamic dialogue that was well delivered combined to send the audience into tears of laughter.

    In a separate issue to the comedy there was the cultural commentary, which is always going to draw attention when it is such a taboo subject as Jihad: a word that is often avoided at all costs. The film unapologetically offers a plethora of questions around motivation, meaning and justification which it never falls into the trap of giving patronizing, melodramatic answers to nor does it preach any solutions.

    The many characters were all utilised to give different points of views and different perspectives; the main protagonist Omar (Riz Ahmed) was fully fleshed out, with the other characters used to offer differing ideas and obviously the above mentioned comic relief. Omar's brother for instance had such a minor part but raises questions around what he considers a true following of Islam, which he promotes as peaceful, but is then exposed as intrinsically sexist due to the way he practically locks his wife in a cupboard. That being said, Islam itself was to a large extent sidelined and the film much more overtly dealt with identification and senses of belonging for a demographic that has partial but not complete grips on the many angles of where its identity is created; this includes Barry (Nigel Lindsay), the Caucasian convert amongst the group.

    Four Lions is easily funny enough to reach a very wide audience, where viewers will be left without answers and therefore forced to discuss these issues, which are too often brushed under the proverbial rug.

    twitter - @destroyapathy
    bladou

    Expected laughs < Actual laughs

    I'm no easy viewer and too often do I find myself being bored while watching a movie, or just barely interested.

    I wasn't expecting much from this one and after a quick reading of the synopsis, I just thought "say whaat ?". As a reminder you might check again the IMDb summary and try to picture it seriously, you would expect some "sofa talking action" - as a friend would describe movies that have more dialogs than action scenes.

    Long story short : that is, without any doubts, the most stupidly funny movie I've seen this year and if you haven't seen it already ... just go (Ok to be honest, I would also put Revenge of the Fallen even if its last year, the level of stupidity is clearly enough for a couple of years).

    Whatever you are looking in a movie this one will deliver, it is filled with dumb-touching characters despite their "mission" as terrorists. The acting is not only great as a comedy but just strait out great, any one in the movie have something special and memorable.

    Hell, you could even try to get a social commentary out of it but that'd be a long stretch, it's meant to be a comedy with a soul not just the usual "a few scenes funny and forget me next week" kind of movie.

    I was really pleased to find this gem completely by chance and hope you will too as this is how comedy films are meant to be.
    9come2whereimfrom

    Powerful and very, very funny.

    Chris Morris has never been one to shy away from subjects that others would call taboo or simply just wrong and that isn't going to change with his latest film 'Four Lions' the story of a group of wannabe suicide bombers. Not the most jovial of subjects I hear you cry, but how wrong could you be? For here we have not only a truly funny film but also a poignant one and one of the best British films of the last decade. Meticulous to detail Morris spent over five years researching the films central themes of terrorism and religion and a lifetime of studying human behaviour and it's only with this foundation that he, along with co writers Sam Bain and Jesse Armstrong (Peep Show), could have made such a brilliant film. You will laugh and hard, then you will realise what it is you are laughing at take a breath and then laugh some more. In the same way that the recent American remake of Battlestar Galactica dealt in allegories of the war on terror, politics and human nature but just happened to be set in space 'Four Lions' just happens to be set in a terrorist cell and in his own admission Morris admitted that he wanted to explore group dynamics that could be found either in a football team, a club of sorts or the guys in this movie. It is so cleverly done that at no point is the film patronising or preachy it just makes you think about the absurd nature of how people think and what lengths they will go to for something they believe in. The film also contains some scenes of the gang spending normal time with their families, even discussing their plans with the children and it's in these scenes that we given over to the idea that they are ordinary people about to do something extraordinary. The cast play their roles, not only with great comic timing, but with an understanding of the subject matter that reflects in their performances. The script is so sharp that not only will you miss stuff on first viewing you will be quoting it for months to come. It is well shot and perfectly paced but let's not forget that this is satire of the highest order and in that there will be elements that might not appeal to all. But if you think you can stomach it then let me assure you that you will see one of the funniest films from one of Britain's most underrated and genuinely talented comedians. Rubber dingy rapids.

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to Christopher Morris, Barry, the Jihadist group leader, was based on a former BNP member who in an attempt to out-knowledge the Asian youths he regularly assaulted, studied the Qur'an and as a result "accidentally converted himself" and became a Muslim.
    • Goofs
      When Barry is driving the group to the airport in his Citroen Xantia, he pulls over in a huff and swallows the key to stop them going. However, the key he produces and swallows is a Ford key, not a Citroen key. Additionally, the car is fitted as standard with a keypad immobiliser, requiring a security number to start - so Omar's attempt to hotwire the car would not have succeeded in real life.
    • Quotes

      Waj: Rubber dinghy rapids bro.

    • Crazy credits
      The London Marathon had no involvement in the making of this film and its portrayal is entirely a work of fiction
    • Connections
      Featured in Breakfast: Episode dated 5 May 2010 (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      Nadia
      Written by Nitin Sawhney

      Performed by Jeff Beck

      Used by kind permission of Imagem Music

      Licensed courtesy of Sony BMG Records Ltd

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    FAQ

    • How long is Four Lions?
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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 8, 2010 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • France
    • Languages
      • English
      • Urdu
      • Punjabi
      • Arabic
    • Also known as
      • Four Lions
    • Filming locations
      • Almería, Andalucía, Spain(Pakistan scenes)
    • Production companies
      • Film4
      • Warp Films
      • Wild Bunch
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $304,616
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $41,512
      • Nov 7, 2010
    • Gross worldwide
      • $6,149,356
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 37 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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