A Sinner in Mecca

A Sinner in Mecca

2015 ""
A Sinner in Mecca
A Sinner in Mecca

A Sinner in Mecca

4.8 | 1h19m | en | Documentary

For a gay filmmaker, filming in Saudi Arabia presents two serious challenges: filming is forbidden in the country and homosexuality is punishable by death. For filmmaker Parvez Sharma, however, these were risks he had to assume as he embarked on his Hajj pilgrimage, a journey considered the greatest accomplishment and aspiration within Islam, his religion. On his journey Parvez aims to look beyond 21st-century Islam’s crises of religious extremism, commercialism and sectarian battles. He brings back the story of the religion like it has never been told before, having endured the biggest jihad there is: the struggle with the self.

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4.8 | 1h19m | en | Documentary | More Info
Released: April. 29,2015 | Released Producted By: ARTE France Cinéma , ZDF Country: Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website: http://asinnerinmecca.com/
Synopsis

For a gay filmmaker, filming in Saudi Arabia presents two serious challenges: filming is forbidden in the country and homosexuality is punishable by death. For filmmaker Parvez Sharma, however, these were risks he had to assume as he embarked on his Hajj pilgrimage, a journey considered the greatest accomplishment and aspiration within Islam, his religion. On his journey Parvez aims to look beyond 21st-century Islam’s crises of religious extremism, commercialism and sectarian battles. He brings back the story of the religion like it has never been told before, having endured the biggest jihad there is: the struggle with the self.

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Cast

Mohamed Gaber

Director

Parvez Sharma

Producted By

ARTE France Cinéma , ZDF

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Reviews

Edward Hall The protagonist in this story is a mess, but he's not the kind of mess worth your time. Born in India and now living in the U.S, he's a homosexual Muslim trying to reconcile this dissonance while documenting his pilgrimage to Mecca.It's not just a documentary about himself though, it's a story about Islam and how it's been interpreted by different cultures.In the process of his trip, we're led down this path thinking that he is going to be the exception to the "Muslim extremists" that we're all told are a minority. He highlights the draconian punishments that are widespread in Islamic countries (i.e. be-headings for being a homosexual), and shows that the religion has been hijacked and advocates reform. (Sadly, the only injustices he really highlights in a religion full of violence and repression are the ones pertaining to homosexuality, which is merely the tip of the iceberg.)He tries so hard to make Islam not look like a universally insane and heartless ideology via his own anecdotal perspective of being an "outsider" Muslim--though it's a difficult argument to buy as he constantly talks to his super power throughout the film. We meet him and his husband and they both seem like pretty typical people with rather average American lives.So he goes to Mecca to be forgiven for his sins and in the process he mostly just highlights how distanced he is from the Islamic order in this part of the world and expresses dismay. He almost makes us think that he might abandon the faith after this unpleasant experience at Mecca.We see all of the insane behaviors that are part of the standard pilgrimage, and he films it in a way that casts doubt on these practices.BUT WE WERE TRICKED!!!It turns out, these religious practices at Mecca weren't extreme enough!!!In one of the final scenes we see him so disappointed that he wasn't able to barbarically kill a goat with his own hands in the name of his faith, that he travels from Saudi Arabia to India to finish his salvation. After this very disturbing scene, he then realizes that what he just did was terribly violent and wrong, yet he finishes out the film praising the same ghost who told him to sacrifice an innocent goat in the first place. This film is full of reasons why Islam is a religion to abandon quickly. Unfortunately here, the lessons were completely lost on our narrator.
AnnB Just finished watching this. You get used to the grainy, hand-held camera after awhile and become totally absorbed into a story that has never been told before. The film, for me, opened doors into a secret world that I never thought I could enter. I felt like I was there with him in Mecca. Not only is this guy brave, he is also a great filmmaker. He successfully creates a story line including his very personal life into a film that could have ended up being a travelogue. This film is not a travelogue. You will be mesmerized. Even my teenage daughter was. Central to it, is a search of the spirit and it does something I like in movies, which is the ending does not answer all your questions. Its an open ending to a film that is anything but traditional.
sddavis63 Parvez Sharma (who made this movie) is a gay Muslim. That, in itself, made this interesting. It seems contradictory. However what really appealed to me was the promise that this film seemed to make to give the viewer a look at Mecca - the holiest city of Islam, located in Saudi Arabia. Saudi Arabia itself seems strange and distant enough. Mecca is actually closed to non-Muslims, which gives it a sort of "forbidden fruit" appeal even to me, as a Christian. I can't go there, but what would I find if I did? Sharma's film promised to give me a glimpse of this off-limits city.Some of the film is shot in New York, where Sharma lives with his boyfriend, and it depicts a bit of their relationship up to their marriage. I really didn't find that particularly interesting. Some of the film is also set in Sharma's birthplace in India. Some of that is interesting. But for the most part the movie is set in Mecca. Sharma travels there for the Hajj - the pilgrimmage that every Muslim is required to make to the Holy City. I assume that filming in Mecca is discouraged if not illegal, because Sharma uses only a cell phone camera and seems to be filming clandestinely. We do get to see a lot of Mecca through his cell phone. Some of it is very beautiful. I appreciated the look inside the Al-Masjid al-Haram Mosque and at the Kabbah, traditionally the first house of worship for Islam, built by Abraham. There's something transfixing about watching the ritual of pilgrims circling the Kabbah. I can understand how that could actually be a powerful spiritual experience for some. Some of the other rituals, including the symbolic stoning of the devil, are shown. This gave me a better understanding of the Hajj - what it's about and what it tries to accomplish. At the same time it's rather jarring to see the commercialism that now accompanies the pilgrimmage (the shopping centre apparently connected to the mosque struck me as very un- Islamic) and the reflections on the amount of garbage the pilgrims leave littering the street and the question of how that shows respect for Allah was interesting.I could appreciate Sharma's courage - in filming things he wasn't supposed to be filming, but also simply in being a gay Muslim in Mecca - which likely would not have been well received if anyone had known. It seemed clear that Sharma also struggled with being a gay Muslim and was trying in some ways to come to peace with his own faith. Personally, I thought there was too much filler revolving around his relationship with his boyfriend in New York. That didn't interest me at all. But I did come away from this feeling as though I had a better understanding of the Hajj.
JoshuaDysart It's pretty obvious from the low IMDb ranking overall that zealotry will be a dominating force in the discussion over this film, which is a shame. Objectively it's not as substantive a movie as I would've liked. It swings pretty haphazardly from personal home movies, to attempts at poetic visual memoir, to the hajj itself (by far the most interesting bits), all shot on an iPhone, which while necessary for the undercover filmmaking in the Kingdom, doesn't add a very strong visual presence to the other 70% of the flick. There's some very brief exploration of how Wahhabist ideas came to gain such a strong foothold across much of the faith but that takes a backseat to Thanksgiving dinner footage and other humanizing, but pretty boring filler. All and all it doesn't deserve the extremely low ranking it's sporting now, simply as an act of personal filmmaking it has some value, but it's also not really that strong a work considering how interesting the subject matter is. One thing is certain, we need more love in the world.