

A 1953 Egyptian melodrama where love gets ruined by class anxiety and one very shady cousin.
Jalal is a successful engineer who loves his neighbor Laila, the granddaughter of a pasha, but he hides his love for fear of social differences. Her uncle supervises her money, even though he is a gambler. Laila's cousin, a reckless young man, covets marrying her to seize her money. He learns by chance that Jalal loves Laila, so he tricks them both, and seizes the money from both of them.
Acting
Laila Fawzy's tragic restraint steals every scene.
Direction
Zulficar's shadowy black-and-white compositions scream emotional doom.
Production
Pasha-era Cairo opulence vs. middle-class modesty, perfectly contrasted.

Director
Ezz Eldin Zulficar
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Ezz Eldin Zulficar directed this during Egyptian cinema's golden age, when studios churned out social melodramas that made audiences weep in air-conditioned theatres.
The 'pasha's granddaughter' trope reflected real anxieties about Egypt's crumbling aristocracy under the 1952 revolution's shadow — this film literally captures a dying social order.