How will Egyptian filmmaking influence our new generation of society and everyday thinking? INTRODUCTION: Over the years, many aspects of spreading movies to theaters to make it a movie have changed dramatically. As time goes by, the way of thinking of each generation is changing and we can see that our era is full of malice and rude. Our filmmaking is foretelling this, and this example is a movie. Because the media plays a major role in influencing our generation's viewers and at different social levels, each social aspect is influenced differently by different observations.
Mohamed Taher is an Egyptian film director from Cairo, Egypt, supporting the famous Cairo Ballet project. In his work Muhammad is exploring issues of social change, diversity, stereotypes, and identity struggle through novels and documentaries. In an interview with Movidiam this time, Muhammad shared his beliefs about his experience with the ballerina project, his work in Egypt and the United States, and the power of the movies linking people. The launch of the project began with the New York City Ballerina Project and various versions of each city. The main purpose of Cairo's ballerina is to show the diversity of Cairo by showing the city where we live from various angles because it becomes a ballerina in the rough of Cairo when using the city as a background of the street dancer . Smoothness
Movie writer and photographer Mostafa Sheshtawy was born in Egypt and grew up in Qatar. He began his career career by recording the Egyptian Revolution in 2011. Since then, he is mainly in the camera department, working at the Doha Film Academy in Egypt and Qatar. His directorial debut is the short documentary "Eternal Memory" screened at Ajyal Youth Film Festival in 2015. Sheshtawy's first short film narration movie is a romantic comedy "Love Blood" (2015).
Mohamed Mahdy is an Egyptian documentary filmmaker and filmmaker who has finished researching multimedia art at Pharos University in Alexandria, Egypt. In his project "Lunar Dust" he recorded the residential area of the western Alexandria next to the cement factory and industrial area. The inhabitants are suffering from various diseases. Mr. Mahdy's project was posted on Lens. Sebastian Hidalgo grew up in Pilsen, a small community of Mexican Americans based in Chicago and is now being pressured to strengthen tempering. His project "Quietest evacuation form at Barrio" is a personal record of his changing community. Mr. Hidalgo is a Chicago magazine and at this time Chicago reporters, Chicago readers, Chicago defenders, and Southern Weekly magazine can write freely. Pearson's picture of him was posted on the lens