Difference between revisions of "Al-Risala"

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''al-Risala" is a biopic about the Prophet Muhammad and the early history of Islam, produced by Syrian American director Mustafa al-Akkad. Akkad's Hollywood fame stemmed from the Halloween series of horror films; later in his career he decided to make this contribution to global understanding of Islam at epic scale, filming English and Arabic versions with different casts. The script of ''al-Risala'' was carefully vetted by al-Azhar University in Cairo, but the film itself was ultimately banned in much of the Muslim world. (Akkad was killed in 2005 in a terrorist attack in Amman.) [https://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2016/08/07/485234999/40-years-on-a-controversial-film-on-islams-origins-is-now-a-classic See this recent NPR story.]
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''al-Risala'' is a biopic about the Prophet Muhammad and the early history of Islam, produced by Syrian American director Mustafa al-Akkad. Akkad's Hollywood fame stemmed from the Halloween series of horror films; later in his career he decided to make this contribution to global understanding of Islam at epic scale, filming English and Arabic versions with different casts. The script of ''al-Risala'' was carefully vetted by al-Azhar University in Cairo, but the film itself was ultimately banned in much of the Muslim world. (Akkad was killed in 2005 in a terrorist attack in Amman.) [https://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2016/08/07/485234999/40-years-on-a-controversial-film-on-islams-origins-is-now-a-classic See this recent NPR story.]

Latest revision as of 18:18, 21 May 2020

al-Risala is a biopic about the Prophet Muhammad and the early history of Islam, produced by Syrian American director Mustafa al-Akkad. Akkad's Hollywood fame stemmed from the Halloween series of horror films; later in his career he decided to make this contribution to global understanding of Islam at epic scale, filming English and Arabic versions with different casts. The script of al-Risala was carefully vetted by al-Azhar University in Cairo, but the film itself was ultimately banned in much of the Muslim world. (Akkad was killed in 2005 in a terrorist attack in Amman.) See this recent NPR story.