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DramaComedy

Where Do We Go Now?

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In a remote, isolated Lebanese village surrounded by land mines, Muslims and Christians live together in peace. As civil strife starts to engulf the country around them, the women in the village try, by various means and to varying success, to keep their men in the dark by sabotaging the village radio, and then destroying the village TV.

Release Date : 2011-09-14

Language :ArabicEnglishRussian

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Les Films des Tournelles

Production Country : EgyptFranceItalyLebanonQatar

Alternative Titles : Where Do We Go Now?

Cast

Claude Msawbaa

Character Name : Takla

Original Name : Claude Msawbaa

Gender : Female

Leyla Hakim

Character Name : Afaf

Original Name : Leyla Hakim

Gender : Male

Nadine Labaki

Character Name : Amale

Original Name : Nadine Labaki

Gender : Female

Yvonne Maalouf

Character Name : Yvonne

Original Name : Yvonne Maalouf

Gender : Male

Antoinette Noufaily

Character Name : Saydeh

Original Name : Antoinette Noufaily

Gender : Female

Julian Farhat

Character Name : Rabih

Original Name : Julian Farhat

Gender : Male

Reviews

A

Andres Gomez

@tanty

2021-06-23

A nice drama-comedy. The idea is very good gut it's not well developed. The cast is also good but the fails in story are what makes the movie not to work completely.

D

david_kash

@david_kash

2022-07-15

Astonishingly Refreshing! Xcellent all around movie with wonderful actors & characters camerawork,editing... Movie's beginning impressed me immensely. Nadine is an extremely talented & beautiful artist with a message of peace & harmony. Will explore her works n not miss anything she creates. Carry on Nadine, ~ go rattle Hollywood 👍🏻❗

B

badelf

@badelf

2024-01-12

You may have heard this popular lament: "If mothers ruled the world, there would be no war." What if someone took that maxim and created a movie from it? That's exactly what Nadine Labaki did here! It's hilarious, creative, tongue-in-cheek, contemporary to the current mid-east struggles, and touching. I loved her choices which create a crude, rudimentary atmosphere for the film. This is now my 3rd Labaki movie, and it's so easy to see why this Lebanese woman director is racking up awards in all the festivals (42 wins, 37 nominations). In this one, she lances "religionism". And rightly so - it's the root of nearly all wars.