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Amreeka - Movie 
 
This is a fascinating drama, shot in a documentary style with excellent 
performances from the largely unknown cast.

It stars Nisreen Faour as Muna Farah, a single mother living in the Palestinian 
Territories, working in a bank, and recently divorced from her husband, we meet 
her as she goes shopping for groceries. She sees a well dressed woman, and she 
immediately hides from her, we find out later that the well dressed woman is 
the new woman in the life of her husband, and hence the reason for the 
furtiveness.

We get to see and commiserate with her life, as she deals with the hours of 
road checks, to get to and from work, as well as pick up her son Fadi played by 
Melkar Muallem (he reminds me of Lou Ferrigno of the Incredible Hulk) from his 
private school, as well as looking after her mother.

Muna's life is about to change, she receives a letter because a visa 
application to the U.S. when she was still with her husband has been approved, 
and although Muna is reluctant to go, leaving her elderly mother with her 
brother, on showing the letter to her son, he encourages her, and she sees this 
as a new lease of life especially for him, to get away from the hardship of 
life in the Palestinian Territories.

We get a glimpse of the problems faced by many Palestinians at customs in 
airports all over the world, because when she arrives, she is asked which 
country she is a citizen of, she replies that she has no citizenship, the clerk 
asks her which country she is from, she says she has no country, which the 
clerk seems amazed, and asks if she is a Palestinian or an Israeli, she says 
she is from the Palestinian Territories. Prior to this there is a slightly 
humorous scene when he asks her occupation, and although she speaks English, as 
well as French and Arabic, she says "Yes we are occupied".

On arriving she is met by her sister Raghda Halaby (played by Hiam Abbass) and 
her husband Nabeel who has a medical practice, played by Yussuf Abu-Warda.
Unfortunately customs had seized several belongings including a cookie box, 
which had her entire savings in it, so she arrives with nothing but the two 
hundred dollars Fadi's uncle gave him as a going away present.

She enrols Fadi at a local high school, and goes about looking for a job, but 
is soon downcast, as even with a degree she is unable to find suitable work. 
Fadi on the other hand is having to deal with the usual taunts that he is a 
suicide bomber from his classmates, while his cousin Salma played by the lovely 
Alia Shawkat tries her best to get him to fit in.

The movie is set soon after the invasion of Iraq in 2003, and the audience will 
feel for the plight of Muna and her sister's family, with undeserved animosity 
being shown towards them in many areas of their life for simply being Arabs.

It is a lovely movie with superb performances from the stellar cast, that at 
the end resounds hope.

 
 Mr D Stevens is a reviewer at http://moviereviews.noskram.com/  <strong>Movie 
reviews</strong> 
 Keywords: Movie Reviews,film reviews,film review,movies,films,Movie 
Review,Amreeka,Nisreen Faour,Melkar Muallem,Alia Shawkat,Hiam Abbass,Yussuf 
Abu-Warda,drama,palestinian,immigration,immigrants,friendship 
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