Looking for Oum Kulthum

2017
5.7| 1h30m| en
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A film within a film, "Looking for Oum Kulthum" is the plight of an Iranian woman artist/filmmaker living in exile, as she embarks on capturing the life and art of the legendary female singer of the Arab world, Oum Kulthum. Through her difficult journey, not unlike her heroine's, she has to face the struggles, sacrifices and the price that a woman has to pay if she dares to cross the lines of a conservative male dominated society.

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Also starring Mehdi Moinzadeh

Reviews

RipDelight This is a tender, generous movie that likes its characters and presents them as real people, full of flaws and strengths.
MusicChat It's complicated... I really like the directing, acting and writing but, there are issues with the way it's shot that I just can't deny. As much as I love the storytelling and the fantastic performance but, there are also certain scenes that didn't need to exist.
Fatma Suarez The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful
Rosie Searle It's the kind of movie you'll want to see a second time with someone who hasn't seen it yet, to remember what it was like to watch it for the first time.
Horst in Translation (filmreviews@web.de) "Looking for Oum Kulthum" is a new 1.5-hour film, a collaboration between many countries and the outcome is unsurprisingly in several languages too. This was written and directed by Shirin Neshat and Shoja Azari and it is the story of a female filmmaker, her current project and the people entering her life in the process. And of course about singer Oum Kulthum and her legacy as well as impact on the people several decades ago. I read that she was as big a star in her region as Maria Callas is for us, but yeah fiven thatg popularity I am still a bit surprise I have not heard about her at all. My loss I guess. Sadly, this film never really made enough of an impact for me to really take a deeper look in her career. The main character is played by Neda Rahmanian and her role as a filmmaker includes most of all struggles, such as finding the right actors for her big project, giving the project the right approach, overcoming anti-female discrimination and eventually struggling with the disappearance of her son and as a consequence getting severe doubts about the project's existence. But sadly, hardly any of these fields felt executed with sufficient talent and attention to detail. Lets start with the casting. We only find out about one casting decision, the one in the center of it all and that would have been tolerable if only they had not tried to convince us that it#s right to make this decision in favor of somebody with virtually no acting experience, just the singing, and still she is supposed to be enough. I don't know. It also isn't helping much how the project, not at one point during filming, seems to have a script that has a lot to do with Kulthum's life, but is merely fictitious for the most part while still using her big name to attract audiences. And finally, when the main character says there is one day of shooting left and she changed the entire script in a crucial manner that it's all good. It's really unprofessional to me and what may or may not have happened to her son never feels like sufficient explanation. By the way, why is she not going to look for him in a way you'd expect a good mother to do. Or at least immediately retiring from the project, I am sure everybody would have understood. The changes in her mind about the film are maybe the biggest problem of the actual film because absolutely none of what is leading to these decision was elaborated on for the audience in a sufficiently convincing manner that we could follow through and understand her thinking process. So yeah, there are many flaws in this film unfortunately. It may seem deep significant to the untrained eye with its references about gender equality, several areas of art, motherhood, creative conflict and more and the geographical area where it is set, what it is about may trick some awards bodies too into thinking this is a quality movie. But it is not. It could have been, but the execution just isn't there and the ways in which it tries to hide the lack of a convincing plot behind seemingly meaningful metaphors and symbolisms feel embarrassing. Watch something else instead.
Anastasia Hornal has been carefully crafted, as if watching a braided essay unfold. I started the film intrigued and confused; I finished intrigued, confused, and enthralled. A cinematic art statement, every scene a visual delight, endowed with a story rarely told. With integrity, and humanity you are captured by the tale of a struggling woman, who has given her all to be sucessful, to achieve and find grandiose accomplishment in her work and art. To be powerful, like Oum Kulthum. Or at least, to understand her. She fails. Pay close attention to this movie, to the dream, to the musical cues that will pave the emotional course through each scene. At the end, you will find the most respectful, and humble homage to the great Oum Kulthum.
rodinhamidi Well crafted and honest study of an artistic process, both in personal and professional level.
farditi From the very first sequence you know that you'll be taken into a powerful and mysterious journey into the lives of two artists, which captures all of your senses!