Sabah

Sabah

2005 "A Love Story"
Sabah
Sabah

Sabah

6.8 | 1h26m | en | Drama

One day, when Sabah least expects it, she falls in love with the wrong man. She's Muslim, he's not. Unbeknownst to her family, she goes on a whirlwind affair before both culture and love collide.

View More
AD

WATCH FREEFOR 30 DAYS

All Prime Video
Cancel anytime

Watch Now
6.8 | 1h26m | en | Drama , Comedy , Romance | More Info
Released: June. 04,2005 | Released Producted By: T. L. Boulton , Country: Canada Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

One day, when Sabah least expects it, she falls in love with the wrong man. She's Muslim, he's not. Unbeknownst to her family, she goes on a whirlwind affair before both culture and love collide.

...... View More
Stream Online

The movie is currently not available onine

Cast

Arsinée Khanjian , Jeff Seymour , Kathryn Winslow

Director

Jonathan Dueck

Producted By

T. L. Boulton ,

AD

Watch Free for 30 Days

All Prime Video Movies and TV Shows. Cancel anytime.

Watch Now

Trailers & Images

Reviews

Alexander Werner I expected this movie to start where it ended: How do the Arab Muslim family and the Arab Muslim community react on intermarriage of a Muslim girl to a Christian/Atheist father. Such marriages are forbidden in Islam, because the children of such marriages are not considered Muslims.In lands governed by Islamists, both the boy and the girl would risk to be killed. If lucky, they could get lashes, or be thrown to jail. These sad stories are neither rare, nor new, and hardly make into news.The real question is the TRUE reaction of Canadian Arab community: will they ostracize the brother, as he is the only one who really wants to be a part of it? Does brother want to ignore the native community for the sake of joining the wide Canadian society? Or, Stephen just converted to Islam under the guidance of the "Islam for Dummies" and that solved the puzzle? The movie did not provide answers for any of these questions.
rehabpatail-769-712349 In a nutshell, "Sabah" is a lot of Arab stereotypes rolled into one and sends the wrong message about Muslim women. This is not something I usually care to defend but throughout the entire movie, all Sabah does is contradict herself. "Oh I can't do this because Islam says not to but hey, let me change 40 years of beliefs within a matter of a few minutes/days".I understand it's a movie and it's supposed to be lighthearted and whatnot but come on, this is extremely unrealistic for a movie that's trying to portray a situation a lot of Muslim women in the Western world are going through. Her transitions make no sense at all.SPOILER Does no one find it strange that her sister-in-law's affair is a topic that doesn't even get touched after it's been introduced? What was the point of bringing it up in the first place? SPOILERI don't know how people who have no experience with Islam and the Arab culture feel about this movie but as someone who does, I can say it sucked. A lot. A LOT. It was...just horrid. I don't think a minute went by when I didn't cringe or groan out of disbelief.
jonathancee This movie offers nothing new to the audience. They basically put this script through a spaghetti machine and this was the end product. Id rather throw my nine dollars in the street and watch bums fight over it. It is my Big Fat Greek Wedding meets Bend It Like Beckham without the football or the Greeks. The only good part about this movie is the opening score which kind of moved me a little. I can't understand why people like this movie so much. It tries to be another film that dips into multiculturalism but in the end just falls short of being a good movie period. The main actress seems to only get work when movies are produced by her husband. There is your ten lines IMDb!
plowe16 Let's face it: SABAH, a joyous feature concerning a Toronto Muslim woman discovering romance for the first time is everything MY BIG FAT OVERRATED Greek WEDDING should have been: hilariously funny, deeply moving, intensely profound, and wonderfully romantic- and I say this as a thirty-something male who doesn't normally like romantic comedies. Sabah (Arsinée Khanjian) has just turned 40. Bu she's feeling the pressure of having to take care of her elderly mother, all the while trying to live up to the dogmatic standards of her overly protective brother Majid (Jeff Seymour). Taking a break from tradition, Sabah decides to go for a dip in a nearby public swimming pool. There she (literally) bumps into Stephen (Shawn Doyle) a blue-eyed, barrel-chested Caucasian. Needless to say, the twain has met as Sabah conspires to see Stephen whenever she can behind her family's back. Meanwhile, Sabah's increasingly western niece Souhaire (Fadia Nadda, the director's sister) is trying to get out of an arranged marriage that the family's inflicting on her. Needless to say, East meets West, as it does in other culture-clash comedies, such as DOUBLE HAPPINESS, BEND IT LIKE BECKMAN, and A TOUCH OF PINK. But it's the romantic sparks that fly between Khanjian and Doyle that make this film so engaging. After years of playing the cold fish in her husband's more esoteric films, Khanjian is so bubbly, passionate, sexy, and winsome in this role that it feels like she's actually enjoying herself on screen for the first time (here she should have won the Genie award for best actress as opposed to ARARAT). Moreso, the romance between her and Doyle is believable as well as passionate, complemented by an appropriately dry performance by Doyle as Sabah's ideal, if slightly naive, Canadian Mr. Right. It also reminds one how phony MY BIG FAT Greek WEDDING actually was. There, Nia Vardalos's relationship was consummated way too quickly, resulting in a film where the happy ending begins in the middle of the story. But here, the romance is far more believable, because every baby step Sabah makes towards Stephen becomes in itself a step to self-discovery. And yet, it never becomes a case of a poor little Muslim girl being freed by some great white hope, but a woman discovering her own independence, finding romance on her own terms. Also, whereas BIG FAT Greek WEDDING ended up little more than an episode of THE KING OF KENSINGTON, where anyone ethnic is either too loud, hairy or boisterous, Nadda eschews the stereotypes and is able to get laughs without derision or condescension. The tension in Sabah's family, especially between her and Majid (brilliantly played by Jeff Seymour) says volumes more about the complexities of Muslim culture than anything Hollywood could come up with. And it's a fun panacea to the likes of such media nabobs as Margaret Wente or Daniel Pipes who continually preach to us about the evils of middle-Eastern culture or multiculturalism. Mind you, they wouldn't know what to do with a film like SABAH. It just doesn't exist in their books. Suffice it to say, Nadda's first feature is my feel good comedy for the year. It makes me proud to be Canadian. It makes me want to stand up for multiculturalism. It makes me feel good to be human. (EXTRA NOTE: I actually chanced upon SABAH when it had its North American premiere last year at the NSI's Film Exchange Festival in Winnnipeg. I was in a bad mood at the time, but half hour into the film I was elated. Actually, the film, due to a projectionist's error, had to be rescheduled to be played again the following Saturday afternoon. Nadda, in the film's DVD commentary, even admitted this to being a painful moment. But just to let her know: I was so in love with the main character's story, I came for the following screening and even got to meet Khanjian herself (who was present at the screening), who was as every bit as charming as the character she played. So don't feel bad, Rubba. It was worth the extra wait. As a result, I convinced the local Winnipeg Cinematheque to theatrically screen it, paying money two more times just to see it. Will be buying the DVD soon. Promise.)