Review: The Stories
- Abu Bakr Shawky retells the tumultuous history of Egypt in the second half of the 20th century in an audience-friendly way, as seen from the perspectives of a couple and an extended family

When we get to see some of “big history”, such as wars, political assassinations and military coups, unfolding virtually right before our eyes, it is safe to assume that, if we come out the other side unscathed, we will have many stories to recount about said events. This is the premise of Abu Bakr Shawky’s (Yomeddine [+see also:
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The place is Egypt, the time between 1967 and 1984. The film is structured into five chapters, each following our hero Ahmed (Amir El-Masri) and his colourful extended family during an episode set against a historical event, such as two wars against Israel in 1967 and 1973, the street riots against the pro-market reforms in 1977, and the assassination of president Anwar Sadat in 1981. When we first meet him, Ahmed is a gifted pianist living in a cramped house with his homemaker mother Fairouz, civil-servant father Ragheb and two brothers: his twin, Russian language and Soviet politics enthusiast Hassan, and Sharaf, who is into football, particularly the unlucky Zamalek club.
Their home is often visited by uncles and neighbours, his father might have got into trouble for uttering the word “corruption” on live television, the whole family is waging a “noise war” against the neighbour upstairs, and the brothers are targeted by bullies who support another club. Hassan has been drafted into the army just in time to participate in the Six-Day War, and Ahmed has started a pen-friendship with an Austrian girl called Elizabeth.
Six years later, Ahmed is in Vienna on a scholarship, courting Elizabeth (Valerie Pachner, from A Hidden Life [+see also:
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The Stories is a rare animal on the festival circuit, as it is an audience-friendly form of organised chaos that operates in a heightened emotional register and speaks about troubled life experiences in a fairly light-hearted way. In order to do so, Shawky relies heavily on a number of clichés, tropes and commonplaces, such as the actors’ rapid-fire dialogue, some hectic pans in Wolfgang Thaler’s cinematography and rapid cuts in Roland Stöttinger’s editing, as well as the loud sound design and even louder music, usually consisting of nationalist anthems and marches from the TV, contrasted with the modern, virtuoso pieces that Ahmed plays.
The thing is that these broad strokes usually work perfectly well, although more demanding viewers may pan the film on the grounds of exoticism exemplified by the slightly kitschy production design, the wild acting and the over-the-top sentimentality. But those things are here for a reason: they work in movies. And The Stories is just that, a fun movie that would fare better in theatres than on a festival circuit dominated by gloomy arthouse pieces. In a milieu like this, it constitutes a refreshing change.
The Stories is an Austrian-Egyptian-French-Belgian-Swedish co-production staged by Cinenovo, in co-production with Film AG, Film Clinic, Fox in the Snow and Wrong Men. Goodfellas handles the international sales.
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