A Girl Named Mahmoud

A Girl Named Mahmoud
Directed byNiazi Mostafa
Written byAhmed Abdel Wahab
Bahgat Kamar
StarringSoheir Ramzy
Mohamed Reda
Samir Ghanem
Zinat Sidqi
Hala Fakher
Release dates
  • January 1, 1975 (1975-01-01)

Running time
102 minutes
CountryEgypt
LanguageArabic

A Girl Named Mahmoud (Arabic: بنت اسمها محمود; Bint Ismaha Maĥmood) is a 1975 Egyptian comedy film directed by Niasi Mustafa. The film stars Soheir Ramzy, Mohamed Reda, Samir Ghanem, Zinat Sidqi and Hala Fakher. The film opened in Egypt in January 1975.

Plot

Ĥamida (Suhair Ramzi) is the daughter of an illiterate widower, al-Ĥag Firghalee. Firghalee attempts to prevent his daughter from studying at a university, so the medical student Ĥassan helps her. After Firghalee reveals he will marry Ĥamida to a boy she dislikes, Ĥassan has her disguise herself as a man, Mahmoud. Ĥassan and his friends lie to Firghalee, telling him they performed surgery to change Ĥamida into a man.[1] Ĥamida's disguise has an effeminate appearance, and both male and female employees at Firghalee's furniture shop are attracted to "Mahmoud" and many conclude "he" is a homosexual.[2]

Firghalee's father mistakenly believes that "Mahmoud" is a homosexual when he sees "him" kiss Hassan. He arranges to have Lawaĥith, a cabaret entertainer, meet "Mahmood" to set "his" sexuality straight, but "Mahmoud" is not attracted to women and is unwilling to sleep with Lawaĥith.[2] One woman says that she has the child of "Mahmoud" and two women claim to be engaged to "Mahmoud". After a doctor mistakenly states "Mahmoud" is pregnant, Ĥamida reveals her true identity. She and Ĥassan marry.[3]

Cast

  • Samir Sabry as Hassan
  • Soheir Ramzy as Hamida/Mahmoud
  • Mohamed Reda as Farghali
  • Samir Ghanem as Wahid
  • Zinat Sidqi as Om Ibrahim
  • Hala Fakher as Suad
  • Sayed Zayan as Sayed Kolonia
  • Salama Elias as University Teacher
  • Fatma Omara as Tawhida
  • Soheir El-Barouni as Lawahez

Reception

Samar Habib, author of Female Homosexuality in the Middle East: Histories and Representations, wrote that the film "exploits the genre of transvestism as comedy" and that "several homoerotic images can be presented safely and innocently to mainstream audiences" through a female character pretending to be a male.[1] She explained that because no characters consciously desire those of the same sex and because Ĥamida is still a woman, the film puts the audience "at ease".[4] Habib added that "the question of [whether homoeroticism is forbidden in religion] does not surface so much as the issues of cultural belief, perhaps because the two can sometimes be interchangeable."[1]

Habib concluded that the film does not successfully thoroughly examine homoerotic desire and that the film "attempts to rationalize homosexuality as a form of transgenderism (women who desire other women must be essentially men)".[4]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Habib 2007, p. 126
  2. ^ a b Habib 2007, p. 127
  3. ^ Habib 2007, p. 128
  4. ^ a b Habib 2007, p. 129

References

  • Habib, Samar (2007). Female Homosexuality in the Middle East. New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-95673-4.