Cairo Time

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Cairo Time
Cairotime poster.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Ruba Nadda
Produced by Shana Collier
David Collins
Daniel Iron
Gabriel Khoury
Charles Pugliese
Christine Vachon
Claire Welland
Written by Ruba Nadda
Starring Patricia Clarkson
Alexander Siddig
Elena Anaya
Tom McCamus
Amina Annabi
Music by Niall Byrne
Cinematography Luc Montpellier
Edited by Teresa Hannigan
Production
company
Distributed by Cinemien, Mongrel Media, E1 Entertainment
Release dates
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  • October 9, 2009 (2009-10-09)
Running time
88 minutes
Country Canada
Language English
Box office $1,995,012[1]

Cairo Time is a 2009 film by Canadian director Ruba Nadda. It is a romantic drama about a brief, unexpected love affair that catches two people completely off-guard. The movie won the "Best Canadian Feature Film" at the Toronto International Film Festival 2009.[2]

Plot

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Juliette (Patricia Clarkson) is a Canadian magazine editor who arrives in Cairo for a vacation with her long-time husband (Tom McCamus), a UN official working in Gaza. Delayed, her husband asks his friend—a handsome Egyptian named Tareq (Alexander Siddig)—to watch over Juliette. Juliette finds herself falling in love not only with the city but with Tareq. Their relationship seems to have been platonic.[3]

Production

When Ruba Nadda finished writing the script for Cairo Time she showed it to producer Daniel Iron of Foundry Films. Daniel, remembering Ruba's previous feature Sabah, loved the script and decided to work with her.

Atom Egoyan gave the screenplay for Cairo Time to Christine Vachon and Charles Pugliese at Killer Films in New York in 2005. Vachon saw there was a lot of potential in the script and decided to meet Nadda with Pugliese. After meeting Nadda they wanted to get involved in the project and thereby became executive producers. Because Canada did not have co-production treaties with Egypt they needed to find a way to shoot in Egypt anyhow. Iron was introduced to David Collins of Samson Films in Ireland by Ruba Nadda. Collins met Nadda at a film festival in Mannheim and in Rotterdam and was familiar with her work. Samson decided to join the project, making it a Canada-Ireland co-production, which allowed them to shoot in Egypt.[4]

Cast

Reception

Rotten Tomatoes certified the movie "fresh" with 82 as of August 2010.[5] The film was received with great reviews. The Wall Street Journal said "Clarkson makes taking 'Cairo Time' well worth it",[6] while CTV News gave the movie a positive review stating that the movie as "A masterful look at repressed romance" giving it 3 stars out of 4[7][8] Picktainment.com said "Ruba Nadda’s Cairo Time is a passive, delicate film with a mature respect for its surroundings and a profound understanding of neglect, especially in its subtle form."[9] Peter Travers of Rolling Stone called Cairo Time "a fragile romance" and said about Nadda, "Just when you think you know what's coming, the canny writer-director Ruba Nadda (Sabah) makes sure you won't. Nadda lets the sensuous tempos of Cairo life seep into Juliette's system, and ours. It's a haunting and hypnotic film. And Clarkson's sublimely nuanced performance is in every way transporting."[10] At the end of 2010, Cairo Time was named "Best-reviewed romance of the year (2010)" by Rotten Tomatoes.[11]

Release

The movie was released in Canadian theaters on 9 October 2009. Cairo Time won the "Best Canadian Feature Film" at the Toronto International Film Festival 2009. The movie was bought by IFC during Toronto International Film Festival 2009 and released in the U.S. in New York and Los Angeles on August 6, 2010 with a wide release on Labor Day weekend of 2010 by IFC.[12][13] Cairo Time grossed $66,245 in the opening weekend, ranking at #38. The film sold out all shows in the weekend in New York and Los Angeles, with a theater revenue of $12,450, the best per-theater-average of any film in release.[14]

References

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  2. http://sidcity.net/?p=260
  3. http://www.tribute.ca/movies/Cairo+Time+/19101
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External links