Although her family is devoutly Muslim, Amy begins to admire a dance group at school who call themselves Cuties—Angelica (Medina El Aidi), Coumba (Esther Gohourou), Jess (Ilanah Cami-Goursolas) and Yasmine (Myriam Hamma)—and tries to join their ranks. She starts dressing more like them and doing what they dare her to do. Most of my friends were North African, ergo Muslim.

King Sobieski and the winged hussars drove the Muslim horde out of Europe. Sobieski doesn't even show up until the end of the movie. Anti-Islamic content had been added in post-production by dubbing.

Muslim Star

Alex & Eve review: Alex Lykos's star-crossed Greek and Muslim lovers Australia's answer to Romeo and Juliet A genuinely funny comedy about star-crossed lovers from. "The movie was disjointed, the characters listless, and the plot jumped around so much it was hard to follow. The writers and the actors obviously wanted to be done with the series." Guess I give up! Directed by Joel Fendelman, Patrick Daly. With Taoufik Abid, Diab Ahmar, Amer Almaaly, Abdo Almasmary. 'David' tells the story of Daud, an eleven year old religious Muslim boy growing up in Brooklyn. Concealing his Muslim identity, Daud inadvertently befriends a group of Jewish boys who through a haphazard sequence of events mistake him for being Jewish and accept him as one of their own. Youssef is the creator and star of the Hulu series "Ramy." The dark comedy is loosely based on Youssef's life as a first-generation Muslim American millennial and the struggles that come with.

Trailer Muslim Star

It lacks much of the flash, fire and humor of Muhammad Ali and is shot more in the tone of a eulogy than a celebration. The film is long and plays longer, because it permits itself sequences that are drawn out to inexplicable lengths while hurrying past others that should have been dramatic. Kedarnath movie review: Director Abhishek Kapoor has made a dull, forgettable film, a wet weepie starring Sushant Singh Rajput and an 'okay' Sara Ali Khan.

Parents need to know that Wadjda is the first Saudi Arabian movie to be directed by a woman, and it centers on a feisty, independent girl who wants to ride a bicycle, wear sneakers, and be able to compete against her best friend -- a boy in the neighborhood. The movie explores the various religious traditions and laws that many Muslim girls and women have to follow, especially when it comes to. Osamah Sami—star and co-writer of the film, which he built from real-life family experience—said the film is "history-making, the first Muslim rom-com, so it's going to hopefully pave the. 'Taqwacores': Muslim, Misfit And Making A Noise Based on a cult novel, Eyad Zahra's film follows a straight-laced engineering student's discovery of the Islamic punk-rock scene. Radha Blank's film is an intimate, epic reckoning with age, ambition and everything else.