




Season 1 • Episode 1
LatestIn 1939 in eastern Algeria, Omar, a young boy of ten, lives with his family in a room in Dar Sbitar, a house shared by several families who overcome the trials they go through every day to ensure their subsistence. Her deceased father is Aïni, the mother, who bleeds herself from all four veins to keep her children and their grandmother alive. The families of Dar Sbitar share their intimacy and their daily life, this life animates the big house, which itself becomes a character in its own right. "El Harik" (The Fire), is an Algerian drama series in 10 episodes adapted from Mohamed Dib's trilogy "The Big House", "The Fire" and "The Loom".
Production
Dar Sbitar as living character—walls hold decades of breath.
Writing
Dib's trilogy distilled: poetry of poverty, politics in porridge.
Acting
Chafia Boudraa's Aïna: dignity that refuses performance.
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Mustapha Badie filmed during Algeria's post-cinema nadir (1970s), smuggling literary prestige into state television. The trilogy adaptation was revolutionary for centering women's domestic labor as political resistance.
Mohamed Dib refused to return to Algeria after 1954; Badie's series became unauthorized reconciliation. The house's architecture mirrors Dib's own childhood in Tlemcen—every corridor a memory he couldn't revisit.