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Cairo Station (1958, Egypt) (aka
The Iron Gate, or Bab el Hadid)
In Youssef Chahine's breakthrough, daring crime melodrama
(censored and banned for 12 years in its native Egypt for its lurid
and provocative content), nominated as Best Foreign Language Film
(Egypt's entry) - the first great Arab film:
- the opening pre-credits, voice-over narration by
news-agent Madbouli (Hassan el Baroudi) - amidst a montage of bustling,
noisy locomotive trains coming and going with hundreds of travelers
moving about: "This is Cairo Station, the heart of the capital.
Every minute one train departs and every minute another one arrives.
Thousands of people meet and bid farewell. People from North and
South, natives and foreigners, people with and without jobs"
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Newspaper Vendor Qinawi
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Train porter Abu-Serih
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Drink Vendor Hanuma
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- the depiction of a microcosm of Egyptian society
in the course of a single day - the lives of three characters located
at the Cairo train station, involved in a love triangle:
- sexually-frustrated, degenerate and perverted Qinawi (director
Chahine), a limping, impoverished newspaper vendor (residing in a
ramshackle one-room shed near the station, plastered with cut-outs
of pin-up girls on the wall), hired for work by Madbouli, and madly
infatuated and obsessed with
- feisty, sultry, and flirtatiously sexy Hanuma (Hend Rostrom), who
illegally sold cold drinks from a bucket to train passengers - she
was romantically engaged to
- muscular and burly train porter Abu-Serih (Farid Shawqi), a union
organizer pushing for better wages
- the continual stalking of Hanuma by Qinawi - capped
by finding her at a public outdoor fountain, where he gave her his
mother's solid gold necklace ("It's your wedding present");
when she began to lead him on, he then proposed to her and described
his fantasy of living with her as the perfect couple ("I'm asking
you to marry me...I love you so much. I'll take good care of you...We'll
get married and go back to my village. And I'll introduce you to
everyone. You'll be the loveliest woman there...I'll build you a
house by the sea...far from the crowds, and trains...We'll work the
land, have some cows and live happily ever after"); finally,
when she had enough, she rebuked him: ("Just like that?...Find
yourself another girl...Why me?...The heat's gotten to your head.
Have a cold drink....Serious? Come off it. A house? Cows? You call
that serious? Don't have a penny to your name....Use your head. Look
around. I work hard for a living selling drinks and you limp around
the station selling newspapers. Get a grip on reality. I've had enough...You
call your pennies a living? Look at Abu-Serih...I am marrying him.
Can you compete with him, Gimpy?"); he demanded the necklace
back: "You don't deserve it"
- two other side stories: young ingenues - with the
boyfriend about to leave for four years, and the ongoing newspaper
tale of the brutal and unsolved murder (the "Rasheed Murder")
of a young woman found nearby whose mutilated body was in a blood-stained
trunk without head or arms; the murderer had used either a saw or
a butcher's knife
- the railway barn sequence, when Hanuma offered sex
to Abu-Serih in the hay as she leaned back and displayed her voluptuous
figure; anguished and jealous of their affection, Qinawi stood nearby
outside and listened to the two making love - while clutching a Coke
bottle in front of him; he turned away (paired with a sudden camera
cut to a metaphoric shot of a sagging joint of a railway track under
the weight of a moving train, signifying Qinawi's mental stress);
he smashed his glass Coke bottle against the wall in torment
Train Porter Abu-Serih with Hanuma in Hay
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- in the next ominous sequence, obviously inspired
by the "Rasheed Murder" case, Qinawi purchased a long
butcher knife from a vendor
- and in a stunning scene with dramatic fast-edited
shots (pre-dating the shower scene in Hitchcock's Psycho
(1960)), he stabbed a woman in a dark warehouse that he thought
was Hanuma, who had come to pick up her drink bucket; believing the
female was dead, he then dragged and locked her body into a wooden
crate-trunk that was supposed to contain Hanuma's trousseau for her
impending wedding to Abu-Serih
- the tense sequence as Qinawi watched the heavy wooden
crate with the body of the female victim (with blood dripping out)
carried by porters onto a train, when he feared that they would realize
it carried a body -- in fact, the female victim was not dead, but
discovered alive - and she was able to identify Qinawi as her assailant
Qinawi Holding Hanuma Captive With a Butcher Knife
in Railyard
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- in another stunnng sequence, Qinawi chased Hanuma
in the railyard, and threatened to stab her in the head (and the
two were almost run over by a train in reverse on the tracks),
to keep a crowd from apprehending him; to subdue the insane man,
his boss Madbouli was urged to come forward and promise that he
could marry Hanuma: ("Why are you upset? I'll let you marry
Hanuma. I've got your wedding present in my pocket. We'll have
the wedding tonight, but first get off the rails. Qinawi, my son.
Tonight is your wedding night. I'll be one of your witnesses. I'll
throw a big wedding for you. I'm talking about your wedding, Qinawi.
Don't you believe me? Let her lie here and rest for a while. Come
along with me. Put on your wedding costume. It's your wedding,
son. It'll be the best wedding ever. There will be music, lights,
singing. Only the best for you. You'll be the groom, son. Come,
put this on. Come on, that's my boy. Put your arms in the sleeves.
There you go, fine. Fine, now the other sleeve. Stand tall, bridegroom.
Qinawi, my son, the bridegroom") - Qinawi was tricked into
putting on a strait-jacket before he realized what was happening
- and he struggled as he was being led away
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Cairo Station
Qinawi's Pin-Ups
Qinawi with Hanuma at Fountain
Young Ingenues
Qinawi Eavesdropping on Hanuma with Abu-Serih
Qinawi Purchasing a Butcher Knife
Stabbing Motions
Watching the Heavy Crate with Body Inside Loaded on Train
Bloody Hand Coming Out of Crate, Revealing Wounded Woman
Inside
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