In the Sands of Babylon explained

In the Sands of Babylon
Director:Mohamed Al-Daradji
Producer:Isabelle Stead
Atia Al-Daradji
Mohamed Al-Daradji
Music:Kad Achouri
Cinematography:Mohamed Al-Daradji, Duraid Munajim
Editing:Mohamed Al-Daradji
Runtime:92 minutes
Country:Iraq
Language:Arabic
Budget:$1,200,000

In the Sands of Babylon is a 2013 Iraqi, British, Dutch drama film directed by Mohamed Al-Daradji, Variety's Middle Eastern Filmmaker of the year 2010.

The film was developed through The Sundance Institute and was supported by The Iraqi Ministry of Culture, Baghdad City of Culture of the Arab World 2013, Abu Dhabi Film Festival - Sanad Fund, Creative England, San Sebastian Cinema in Motion.

Plot

1991 Gulf War: Ibrahim, an Iraqi soldier, has escaped from Kuwait as the Iraqi Army retreats. Facing the perilous journey home, he must cross the southern desert; a chaotic no-man's land between Saddam's Regime and American Cross Fire. Whilst unrest spreads across the country, he is captured by the Republican Guard and cast into Saddam's infamous prisons, suspected of being a traitor. 2013: In search of answers about the past and Ibrahim's journey, the Director of the film encounters three people: A photographer with a painful secret, a farmer who hides his scars to forget and an ex-prisoner whose humanity was savagely taken from him. By unravelling the courageous and tragic secrets of these people, the Director seeks to reveal the truth behind Ibrahim's story. Through the past and the present, fiction and reality, he revisits a fateful climax in the battlefields of Babylon. As Ibrahim's fate seems written, the Iraqi people are uprising beyond the prison walls, instilling hope in those held captive, that the freedom they long for beckons.

Cast

Awards

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Jia Zhangke's 'A Touch of Sin' Wins $100,000 Abu Dhabi Film Festival Prize . . 31 October 2013.