Updated On: 23 August, 2019 07:28 AM IST | Mumbai | Johnson Thomas
That AB Shawky chose to base his very first feature on a subject that has been rarely explored in cinema, calls for high praise

A still from Yomeddine

Egyptian director AB Shawky’s first feature, about a man cured of leprosy, looking for his roots, is daring but it’s no masterpiece. The film revolves around 40-year-old Beshay (Rady Gamal) and a plucky 10-year-old Obama (Ahmed Abdelhafiz), who hides in Beshay’s donkey cart when he embarks on a road trip to Upper Egypt. What happens along the route forms the crux of this story.
Beshay, whose face and hands bear the scars of illness, decides to forgo his seclusion for a journey of self-discovery. The film treads on clichéd territory with several calamities befalling the duo, atrocities on the disfigured Beshay and stigmas regarding leprosy getting exposed along the way. That AB Shawky chose to base his very first feature on a subject that has been rarely explored in cinema, calls for high praise.