Inas El-Degheidy Explained

Inas El Degheidy
Birth Date:10 March 1953
Birth Place:Cairo
Nationality:Egyptian
Citizenship:Egypt
Occupation:Film director
Notable Works:Night Talk, 2002

Inas El Degheidy (born 10 March 1953) is an Egyptian film director.[1]

Inas directs films of social and realistic essence, often by using explicit scenes; this has made her being labelled as "controversial". While her films often analyze women's struggles in society, she does not like the term "women's cinema".[1]

Life

Inas El Degheidy was born in Cairo, one of eight children of a conservative, middle-class family. Her father taught Arabic. while he was strict, he was the only one to support her in her family when she wanted to go to film school.[1] She graduated from the Cinema Institute in 1975, and directed her first film Pardon Law in 1985.[2]

Her movie Al-Samt (Silence) tackles the subject of a woman sexually abused by her father. The Egyptian Board of Censors has demanded that the script be modified to ensure the father is portrayed as mentally diseased and thus unrepresentative of the general Egyptian male figure.[3]

Films

Notes and References

  1. Book: Rebecca Hillauer. Encyclopedia Of Arab Women Filmmakers. 5 September 2012. 2005. American Univ in Cairo Press. 978-977-424-943-3. 59–65.
  2. Book: Janis L. Pallister. Ruth A. Hottell. Noteworthy Francophone Women Directors: A Sequel. 5 September 2012. 2011. Lexington Books. 978-1-61147-443-5. 39–40.
  3. Mohammad Abdel Rahman, Inas Al Degheidy: Breaking Taboos in an Age of Islamists, Al Akhbar English, 5 January 2012.