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	<title> &#187; Amina Rizk</title>
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		<title>Doaa al-Karawan (1959)</title>
		<link>http://cineplot.com/doaa-al-karawan/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 26 Sep 2009 00:30:12 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Drama]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ahmad Mazhar]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Amina Rizk]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Egyptian Films]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fatin Hamama]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zahrat El-Ola]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Adapted from a novella of the same title by Taha Husayn, The Nightingale&#8217;s Prayer tells the story of two poor orphaned sisters from the countryside. The first, sent to work as a servant, is seduced and raped by her master, an affluent young engineer, and subsequently killed by her uncle &#8230;]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_1713" class="wp-caption aligncenter" style="width: 590px"><img class="size-full wp-image-1713" title="A scene from Doaa al-Karawan" src="http://cineplot.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/nightingale.jpg" alt="A scene from Doaa al-Karawan" width="580" height="422" /><p class="wp-caption-text">A scene from Doaa al-Karawan (1959)</p></div>
<p>Adapted  from a novella of the same title  by Taha Husayn, <em>The Nightingale&#8217;s Prayer </em>tells the story of two poor orphaned sisters from the countryside. The first, sent to  work as a servant, is seduced and raped by  her master, an affluent young engineer, and subsequently killed by her  uncle in an attempt to clear the family&#8217;s reputation. Her sister, performed by Fatin Hamama, finds refuge in  a middle-class family where she is  helped to acquire a certain education. Yet she does not find peace of mind and is haunted by the idea of  avenging her sister&#8217;s death. She thus  seeks employment by the same man and attempts to make him fall in love  with her in order to be able to punish him. As time passes, ambiguous emotional ties start to link master and servant,  oscillating between moral prohibition  and deep desire. Eventually, they reach a dramatic climax: he dies in her arms, shot by a bullet intended for  her.</p>
<p><em>The Nightingale&#8217;s Prayer </em>includes many of the recurrent  motifs and con­stellations of melodrama,  such as class difference, rape, the merciless father-figure, and  punished desire. It also offers some of the irrational and emotional narrative  twists so typical of the genre, for instance the surprising change of the engineer from notorious womanizer to  devoted lover. More­over, both the  desire of the heroine and the viewer&#8217;s expectations are violently thwarted by the killing of the engineer  at the very moment when he and his  beautiful servant are united in his first sincere embrace. Tragedy and looming  moral danger (seduction) are conveyed not only by the plot construction but also by the set design, which  creates a cold, dim impression.</p>
<p>In  particular, the engineer&#8217;s house is scarcely lit, equipped only with a few sharp-edged pieces  of furniture. Its windows are shaped by small wooden frames that keep out the  daylight and render the atmosphere gloomy and claustrophobic. Even exterior shots  depict an unpopulated rural setting, dominated by sharply contrasted low-key  lighting, isolating the human figures from their background, and heightening the sense  of gloom that emanates from this  doomed cross-class liaison.</p>
<p>Doubtless the film language in <em>The Nightingale&#8217;s Prayer </em>achieves, along with its plot, typical melodramatic  emotionality, yet what has turned it into a modernist-oriented text—apart from  its literary source—is first, its denunci­ation of a &#8216;premodern&#8217; habit, the crime of  honor and therefore the killing of girls who by losing their virginity were considered to have  dishonored their families, and second, its  preoccupation with one of the pillars of modernist thinking, namely education. It is through her  education that the heroine becomes more of a match for the engineer, and it is  also one of the sources of the power  with which she resists his seduction. Nonetheless, the motif of irreconcilable class difference is still pivotal,  due to the extreme poverty of the heroine’s peasant family as oppose to the  bourgeois prosperity and indulgent lifestyle of the engineer &#8211; <strong>Viola Shafik</strong></p>
<h3 class="title">Cast and Production Credits</h3>
<p><strong>Year -</strong> 1959<strong>, Genre &#8211; </strong>Drama<strong>, Country -</strong> Egypt<strong>, Language -</strong> Arabic<strong>, </strong><strong>Director &#8211; </strong>Henri Barakat, <strong>Cast &#8211; </strong>Fatin Hamama, Ahmad Mazhar, Amina Rizk, Zahrat El-Ola</p>
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