The Blazing Sun (1954 film) explained

The Blazing Sun
Director:Youssef Chahine
Producer:Gabriel Telhamy
Mustafa Hasan
Starring:Faten Hamama
Omar Sharif
Zaki Rostom
Abdel Waress Assar
Farid Shawki
Hamdy Gheith
Music:Fouad El Zahiri
Cinematography:Ahmed Khorshed
Distributor:Nile Cinema
Runtime:125 minutes
Country:Egypt
Language:Arabic
Budget:25.8 million tickets
(Soviet Union)

The Blazing Sun (Arabic: صراع في الوادي,) is a 1954 Egyptian romance drama film directed by Youssef Chahine and written by Helmy Halim and Ali El Zorkani. It stars Omar Sharif and Faten Hamama. This was the first film role that Omar Sharif played. In 1996, during the Egyptian Cinema centennial, this film was selected one of the best 150 Egyptian film productions. It was presented in the 1954 Cannes Film Festival under the name The Blazing Sky.[1] [2] It was a box office hit in the Soviet Union, where it sold tickets in 1956.[3]

Plot

Omar Sharif plays Ahmed Salam, an engineer and son of Saber Abdul Salam (Abdel Waress Assar), a sugar cane farm owner. In Egypt in 1951, Ahmed is congratulated by the peasant farmers after improving and increasing the production of sugar cane on the peasant farm. Taher Pasha, a wealthy land owner who runs a competing sugar cane production facility, feels threatened by the villager's newfound prosperity. Along with his nephew, Riad, the Pasha floods the peasant's sugar cane crops in order to protect his own wealth. After the peasant crops are destroyed, the village Sheikh is the only person to suspect that the Pasha is responsible.

Ahmed is in a love relationship with the Pasha's daughter, Amal (Faten Hamama), but due to their different social class, they hide their relationship. Riad asks the Pasha for his permission to marry Amal, but the Pasha refuses.[1] [4] [5] [6]

The Pasha soon learns of a heated dispute that occurred between Ahmed's father and the Sheikh. The Pasha uses this to his benefit, as he and Riad steal Saber Effendi's rifle and set up a conspiracy against Saber Effendi. The next day, the Sheikh is found murdered. Saber Effendi is immediately blamed by the angry villagers for his death and is found guilty by the court after testimony by Hassan, the only witness to Saber's innocence. Unbeknownst to the community, Hassan secretly conspired with the Pasha to kill the Sheikh. Hassan turns against Saber, and he is sentenced to death. While Ahmed searches for Hassan to clear his father's name, Selim, the Shiekh's son, prepares to kill Ahmed to further avenge the Sheikh's death. After a short pursuit by Ahmed, Hassan is struck by a train and killed. Saber is executed, and Ahmed, fearing his death, hides in an ancient temple in the desert with the help of Amal. Here, Amal reveals to Ahmed the truth about the Sheikh's murder.[1] [4] [5] [6]

Riad attempts to kill Ahmed in the temple, where Ahmed is simultaneously being pursued by Selim. Both Ahmed and Amal are wounded in the chase. Riad kills the Pasha, who confesses his crimes. Selim apologizes to Ahmed, and they both turn Riad over to the police. Ahmed and Amal embrace and walk off into the distance.[1] [4] [5] [6]

Main cast

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Film information . 2007-01-28 . Faten Hamama's official site . Arabic.
  2. Web site: Festival de Cannes: Sira' Fi al-Wadi . 2009-01-30. festival-cannes.com.
  3. Web site: «Борьба в долине» (Siraa Fil-Wadi, 1953) . . ru . 7 April 2022.
  4. Web site: Film summary . 2007-01-28 . Adab wa Fan . Arabic.
  5. Web site: Film summary . 2007-01-28 . AraMovies . Arabic.
  6. Web site: Film summary . 2007-01-28 . Arabic Movies . Arabic . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20030218010235/http://www.arabicmovies.net/english/showcasset.asp?format=PAL&q=100268&ctg=21&cp=1 . February 18, 2003 .