Ali Badrakhan
This biography of a living person includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (September 2019) |
Ali Badrakhan | |
---|---|
علي بدرخان | |
Born | Cairo, Egypt | April 25, 1946
Occupation(s) | Film director, screenwriter |
Known for | The Love that was |
Spouse | |
Father | Ahmed Badrakhan |
Ali Badrakhan[1] (born April 25, 1946) is an Egyptian film director and screenwriter, the son of the director Ahmed Badrakhan. He worked as assistant to Fatin Abdel Wahab in Land of Hypocrisy in 1968, and with Youssef Chahine in the films Selection in 1971 and The Sparrow in 1974; his first movie was The Love That Was (1973) by Soad Hosny. Badrakhan collaborated with Naguib Mahfouz, Salah Jahin, and Ahmed Zaki.
Early life
[edit]Badrakhan was born to Ahmed Badrakhan who is of Kurdish descent and Salwa Allam in Cairo circa 1946.
Filmography
[edit]Year | Title | Arabic Title | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1969 | Nadia | ||
1975 | Karnak | الكرنك | Director, Writer |
1978 | Shafika and Metwali | شفيقة ومتولي | Director, Writer |
1981 | People on the Top | أهل القمة | Director, Writer |
1986 | The Hunger | Al-Go'a, الجوع | Director, Writer, Producer |
1991 | The Sheperd and the Women | Al-Ra'i wal Nisaa, الراعى والنساء | Director, Producer |
2002 | Desire | Al-Raghba | Director |
See also
[edit]Bibliography
[edit]- Laura U. Marks, Hanan Al-Cinema: Affections for the Moving Image, The MIT Press UK. 2015.
- Josef Gugler, Film in the Middle East and North Africa: Creative Dissidence, University of Texas Press Austin, USA. 2011, pages 369.
- Terri Ginsberg, Chris Lippard, Historical Dictionary of Middle Eastern Cinema, Scarecrow Press, UK. 2010, 527 pages.
- Jean-François, Brière, Dictionnaire des cinéastes africains de long métrage, Karthala-ATM, 411 2008, pages.
- Roy Armes, Dictionary of African Filmmakers, Indiana University Press, USA. 2008, 402 pages.
- Viola, Shafik, Popular Egyptian Cinema: Gender, Class, and Nation, American University Press in Cairo, Egypt. 2007, 349 pages.
- Joel S. Gordon, Revolutionary melodrama: popular film and civic identity in Nasser's Egypt, Middle East Documentation Center, 2002, 300 pages.
- Leaman, Oliver, Companion, Encyclopedia of Middle Eastern and North African Film, London : Routledge, 2001.
- Hind Rassam Culhane, East/West, an ambiguous state of being: the construction and representation of Egyptian cultural identity in Egyptian film, P. Lang, 1995, 226 pages.
- Keith, Shiri, Directory of African film-makers and films, Greenwood Press, 1992, 194 pages.
- Peter Cowie, International Film Guide, Tantivy Press, 1977, 536 pages.
Note
[edit]External links
[edit]- Ali Badr Khan,[1]