A Woman of Fire

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A Woman of Fire
Directed byReda Mayser
Written by
  • Reda Mayser
  • Mohsen Al-Sameraay
Starring
CinematographyYoussef Antar
Edited byReda Mayser
Production
companies
  • Qablawi Films
  • Zalat
Distributed byAmal Film
Release dates
  • 1 January 1971 (1971-01-01) (Beirut, Lebanon)
Running time
83 minutes
Countries
LanguageEgyptian Arabic

A Woman of Fire (Arabic: امرأة من نار, French: femme de feu, translit: Imra' Min Nar or EMRA'A MEN NAR)[1][2] is a 1971 film starring Salah Zulfikar and Nahed Yousri.[3][4][5] It is written and directed by Reda Mayser.[6][7][8]

Synopsis[edit]

Ahmed Lotfi is being chased by a group of people in Istanbul, but a girl named Turkan Abdel Hamid saves him from them. It turns out that she knew him, and a person named Shawkat told him that the reason for the chase was related to his brother Farid, who was being held by the Falcon Gang.

Crew[edit]

  • Writer: Reda Mayser
  • Director: Reda Mayser
  • Produced by: Qablawi Films – Zalat
  • Distribution: Amal Film
  • Cinematographer: Youssef Antar
  • Editor: Reda Mayser

Cast[edit]

Primary cast[edit]

  • Salah Zulfikar in the role of Ahmed Lotfi
  • Nahed Yousri in the role of Nazik/Turkan
  • Ziyad Mawlawi in the role of Ziyad
  • Adeeb Qaddoura in the role of Fahd

Supporting cast[edit]

  • Muhammad Khair Halawani
  • Adnan Ajlouni
  • George Amber
  • Reza Al-Tayyar
  • Uba Al-Halabi
  • Mohamed Gomaa

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ قاسم, خليل، محمد (2003). ذاكرة السينما في سورية (in Arabic). وزارة الثقافة، المؤسسة العامة للسينما في الجمهورية العربية السورية،.
  2. ^ Movie - A Woman of Fire - 1971 Cast، Video، Trailer، photos، Reviews، Showtimes, retrieved 2023-01-23
  3. ^ A Woman of Fire (1971) - IMDb, retrieved 2023-01-23
  4. ^ «A Woman of Fire» (1971) (in Russian), retrieved 2023-01-23
  5. ^ قاسم, محمود. موسوعة الأفلام العربية - المجلد الأول (in Arabic). E-Kutub Ltd. ISBN 978-1-78058-309-9.
  6. ^ "A Woman of Fire (1971)". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 2023-01-23.
  7. ^ Emra'a Men Nar, retrieved 2023-01-23
  8. ^ قاسم, خليل، محمد (2003). ذاكرة السينما في سورية (in Arabic). وزارة الثقافة، المؤسسة العامة للسينما في الجمهورية العربية السورية،.

External links[edit]