

Haroun is an old bachelor who has lived in Oran for several years. A retired civil servant, he leads a reclusive life until the day he meets Kamel in a bar—a journalist to whom he tells an incredible story dating back to 1942. He claims to be the brother of ‘the Arab’ killed in a story told in one of the most famous novels of the 20th century, ‘The Stranger’ by Albert Camus. An Arab with an erased name: Moussa. Through anger, assertions, details, and confidences, Haroun finally convinces the journalist to listen to his story. His confession is a cry of freedom and distress—but above all, a cry of revolt: against an abusive mother, against a country that failed to achieve true independence, against a book, and against a famous French writer.
The original title is "l'Arabe" (AR).
The runtime is 106 minutes (1h 46m).
The film features dialogue in 3 languages: Arabic, Spanish, French.
It was a co-production between: Algeria, Belgium, France, Switzerland, Saudi Arabia.
The film was directed by Malek Bensmaïl.
The screenplay was written by Jacques Fieschi and Malek Bensmaïl.
The score was composed by Nicolas Rabaeus.
Cinematography was handled by Gilles Porte.
This title is listed on IMDb as tt39230003.
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l'Arabe
Released
العربية, Español, Français
Algeria, Belgium, France, Switzerland, Saudi Arabia







