| Tuesday
in small-town Syria in 1969 means only one thing: gathering at the
local bigwig’s house to hear the popular radio show At
Our Listeners’ Request To a nostalgic soundtrack of classic
Arabic ballads, the film’s cast of oddball characters pursue
their dreams and romances, but the radio brings more than they bargained
for: news of the Apollo moon landing, reports of bombings on the
border with Israel. And when the town’s young hero is drafted,
the radio’s songs become more poignant still.
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Directed
by: Abdellatif Abdul-Hamid
Script: Abdellatif Abdul-Hamid
Camera: Yousef Ben Yousef
Editing: Ali Laylan
Production manager: Husni al-Barm
Dramatic Consultant: Hassan Sami Yousif
Décor: Ahmad Mo‘alla
Costumes: Larissa Abdul-Hamid
Make Up: Rama Sharawati
Cast: Fayez Qazaq, Jamal Qobbesh, Mohsen Ghazi, Ma’moun
al-Khatib, Nibal Jazairi, Ibrahim Issa, Reem Ali, Iman al-Jaber,
Mouaffaq al-Ahmad, Rajaa Youssef
Production: General Organization for Cinema, Syria |
Born
in Lattakiah, in 1954, Abdellatif Abdul-Hamid worked as an actor,
musician and singer in the theaters of his hometown prior to pursuing
studies in film directing. Two years after enrolling in the University
of Lattakiah to study Arabic literature, he earned a scholarship
to study at the VGIK (Moscow Film Institute), where he graduated
in 1981.
He has directed two short documentaries for the General Organization
for Cinema in Syria, Umniyat (Wishes, 1983) and Aydeena
(Our Hands, 1983). He worked as an assistant director to Mohammad
Malas on Ahlam al-Madina (Dreams of the City, 1983). He
also played the lead role in Oussama Mohammad's Stars in Broad Day
(Nujum an-Nahar, 1988). Among Syrian filmmakers his work has garnered
the widest popular appeal in Syria and the Arab world. His filmography
includes, Layali Ibn Awah (Nights of the Jackals, 1988),
Rasa’el Shafahiyyah (Verbal Letters, 1991), Su'ud
al-Matar (The Rise of Rain, 1994), Nassim al-Rouh
(Soul Breeze, 1998), Qamaran wa Zaytounah (Two Moons and
an Olive, 2001), Ma Yatlubuhu al-Mustami‘un (At Our
Listeners' Request, 2003). He has just completed his seventh fiction
feature, due for release in 2006. He has written the scripts for
all his films, as well as the script for a television serial entitled
Usbu‘an wa Khamsat Shuhur (Two Weeks and Five Months,
1985).
His films have earned numerous awards in the Arab world, beginning
with the Damascus Film Festival, the Journées Cinématographiques
de Carthage (Tunisia), and Rabat International Film Festival (Morocco).
They have also received critical acclaim world wide: Verbal Letters
received the Golden Olive at the Valencia Mediterranean Film Festival
in 1992 and At Our Listeners' Request received the Special
Acknowledgement at the Asiatica Film Mediale in Italy in 2003 “for
the lyricism with which he was capable of describing the tricks
of fortune and the reality of war.”
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