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The New York Times
Published: May 7, 2006
Written be Stephen Holden
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/07/arts/07weekahead.htmlFILM
Pity Salem (BASSAM KOUSA) and Nada (SAMAR
SAMI), the nervous Syrian sweethearts who meet in a dirty borrowed
apartment for a secret rendezvous in NABIL MALEH's film "THE
EXTRAS." Even in privacy, they feel the snooping eyes and ears
of the world just outside the door.
Salem, who has a stammer, works at a
gas station and as an extra at the Damascus National Theater. Nada,
an attractive young widow who comes from a strict family, works
as a seamstress in a factory. In their five-year courtship, this
is their first meeting outside a public place. A mood of comic paranoia
dominates the film, which is heavily laced with Salem's flaming
fantasies of steamy erotic delights and disastrous interruptions.
This well-acted Syrian comedy from 1993
is one of the high points of an adventurous film series, "THE
ROAD TO DAMASCUS: DISCOVERING SYRIAN CINEMA," presented at
the Walter Reade Theater by the Film Society of Lincoln Center and
ArteEast, a New York-based organization that promotes Middle Eastern
art. More than 30 Syrian features, documentaries and shorts are
included in the series, which continues through May 18.
It includes the first American screening
of "EVERYDAY LIFE IN A SYRIAN VILLAGE," the breakthrough
film by OMAR AMIRALAY, an internationally acclaimed documentarian.
Several of his works are being shown; that 1974 movie is still banned
in his homeland.
In Syria, as in Iran, filmmakers with
political messages must work around government censorship. The wonder
is that they find ways to express their ideas. Often a single family
(or in the case of "The Extras," a young couple) serves
as an allegorical representation of a country. West 65th Street,
Manhattan, (212) 875-5600.
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