DIFF's The 100 Greatest Arab Films
As seen by Chempo
You are viewing chempo's version of this list. You can view your version too.
An official iCheckMovies list (adopted from mjf314).
Favorited 47 times, disliked 3 times, added to 62 watchlists.
In 2013, the Dubai International Film Festival (DIFF) invited 475 film critics, writers, novelists, academics, and other arts professionals to select the 10 most important films in the history of Arab cinema. They compiled the results into a top 100, which they published in a book, "Cinema of Passion." The book includes analysis of each film in both English and Arabic, written by 20 film critics.
All of the films on this list received at least 9 votes. The most-represented countries are Egypt, Morocco, Syria, Algeria, and Tunisia. See this spreadsheet for the vote counts, top directors, and top films for each country.
Source
Pssst, want to check out the DIFF's The 100 Greatest Arab Films list in our new look?
Filter
-
2 new
Bab el hadid
1958 — a.k.a. Cairo Station, in 6 top lists Check -
4 new
Al-ard
1970 — a.k.a. The Land, in 3 top lists Check -
15 new
Iskanderija... lih?
1979 — a.k.a. Alexandria... Why?, in 1 top list Check -
30 new
Al-asfour
1972 — a.k.a. The Sparrow, in 2 top lists Check -
39 new
Awdat al ibn al dal
1978 — a.k.a. Return of the Prodigal Son, in 1 top list Check -
42 new
Al-massir
1997 — a.k.a. Destiny, in 2 top lists Check -
79 new
Heya fawda
2007 — a.k.a. Chaos, This Is, in 1 top list Check -
84 new
Al-mohager
1994 — a.k.a. The Emigrant, in 1 top list Check
Last updated on Nov 10, 2013; source