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Ali's Wedding

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Ali's Wedding

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Ali's Wedding (2017)

August. 31,2017
|
6.9
| Drama Comedy Romance
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After a "white lie" which spirals out of control, a neurotic, naive and musically gifted Muslim cleric's eldest son must follow through with an arranged marriage, except he is madly in love with an Australian born-Lebanese girl.

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Reviews

BelSports
2017/08/31

This is a coming of age storyline that you've seen in one form or another for decades. It takes a truly unique voice to make yet another one worth watching.

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Sameer Callahan
2017/09/01

It really made me laugh, but for some moments I was tearing up because I could relate so much.

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Patience Watson
2017/09/02

One of those movie experiences that is so good it makes you realize you've been grading everything else on a curve.

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Francene Odetta
2017/09/03

It's simply great fun, a winsome film and an occasionally over-the-top luxury fantasy that never flags.

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abskgopi
2017/09/04

Such a random binge watch that turned out to be such a worthwhile viewing. Hits all the right notes of a rom-com and does so much more than just any other rom-coms. A really recommended light hearted flick!

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christner4682
2017/09/05

Saw this movie on Netflix and chose to watch it on a lazy Sunday Characters were very relatable and fell in love with the fathers teachable stories. Could relate to the expectation to conform(for the main character), in a religious sense. Loved the lead character and felt he did a great job showing his struggle to please parents with their expectations and finding what he in his heart wanted to do. Even if his timing was bad and his execution was suspect. Loved that the lead female character smart strong woman, who had a mind of her own and not someone who is just going to go along with the program she had her own wants and needs and was not willing to sacrifice them to make a man happy or to make him fall for her- very refreshing If you are looking for a lighthearted romantic comedy try this movie! You will be happy you did.

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eyeintrees
2017/09/06

There is so much in this movie that I have no idea about. I know nothing of Muslim culture and it was really fascinating to me. Utterly charming from beginning to end and not 'over tried' or too clichéd, yet some of the moments were laugh out loud ones for me, in fact quite a few. However, I did feel serious discomfort for the theme which can and does occur in any culture or family where children are a misconception in a parent's mind, no matter if they are loved and where pressure from what is considered 'done' can be overwhelming for young people, often at massive detriment. Luckily, this had a happy ending and from it all, this wonderful, well acted and very entertaining movie arose which I would most certainly recommend to every Australian and anyone who loves a good romance and lesson in how we are all the same.

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CineMuseFilms
2017/09/07

There is a narrow space between intelligent racial satire and mocking humour. Of course, you never get just one or the other in the same film: it's always a mix, but the balance is critical and contentious. The Big Sick (2017) is an example of a film that nails the balance with clever dialogue that is genuinely funny and culturally insightful. An example of a film where the balance is less assured is the Australian-made Ali's Wedding (2017).Filmed in multicultural Melbourne, it is a story based on real people, real events, and loads of racial stereotypes. Many of its gag-lines depend on audiences noticing the difference between Lebanese, Egyptian, Iraqi and Iranian Muslims. The son of a popular Iraqi Muslim cleric, Ali (Osama Sami) carries the high expectations of his family who want only that he becomes a doctor and marries a Muslim girl of their choice. Ali is a mediocre student and fakes his medical entrance results to make his family and the community proud of him. He falls for a Lebanese girl called Dianne (Helana Sawires) but dares not tell his family as she is the 'wrong type' of Muslim. Meanwhile he is duped into an arranged engagement to the 'right type' of girl. He sneaks into medical classes to be near Dianne but the intricate web of lies that he has built begins to unravel and his life is a mess. The highlight of this film is the comedic tension caused by Ali's lies. We know that the web must collapse, but we just don't know how or when. There are gags aplenty aimed both at Muslims and at those who laugh at Muslims. The cinematography has a low key, low budget feel that works well with this kind of situational comedy. There are enough sub-plots to give the 'big lie' texture, with a script designed for those who like to laugh at others expense. Osama Sami plays Ali with monotone authenticity while the shining starlight in this film is Helana Sawires. She brightens the screen with intelligent insights into what it's like to be a smart repressed Muslim girl and she easily steals every scene in which she appears.Cross-cultural gags can be funny but when the cinematic lens is widened one asks what are we really laughing at? Comedy is situational, character or script driven, and the situation that Ali has constructed has loads of comedic potential. But the script and characters struggle. For example, the satirical value in staging 'Saddam The Musical' is sabotaged by its amateurish presentation and seriously unfunny theatrics. The cultural differences between various Muslim ethnic groups are trivialised, like in Ali's tea drinking ritual, and the exaggerated responses to the Iman's words of teaching are mocking rather than respectful. In a global climate of Muslim-phobia, the gags in this film at times feel uncomfortably like laughing at people who are different.It is unlucky timing that Ali's Wedding is released so close to The Big Sick as comparisons are inevitable and for some, they will be unkind. Ali's Wedding will be seen by many as a well- intentioned light-hearted rom com, and so it is. But it treads in the same space as many other Aussie inter-racial films and it could have done more with the opportunity.

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