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Luxor (2020) MOVIE REVIEW | CRPWrites

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Movie Review

CASUAL

 Published: 12.02.20

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Joe Kucharski
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         MPAA: NR

                  Genre: Romance. Drama.

LUXOR is not meant to be a riotous rom com, but perhaps it should have been

     RELEASE: 12.04.20

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LUXOR (2020) 

OPENING THOUGHTS:

Samuel Goldwyn Films' features fit a specific niche. Those art house dramas; period romances; character studies in sorrow and regret. Zeina Durra’s minimalistic drama, Luxor, dots the i’s, crosses the t’s, and firmly signs its name in the lifeblood of all that is Samuel Goldwyn Films. As a travelogue, Luxor provides gorgeous viewing; however, a treasure’s worth of patience is required when tending to the movie’s narrative.

DIRECTION:

Set in the ancient Egyptian city, Luxor is almost portrayed as a silent documentary. Director Zeina Durra constantly has the camera leading or following. Down tight Egyptian streets. Through majestic ruins. Ahead of Hana, who is endlessly wandering; her thoughts leagues before her. Luxor is a contemplative movie, and Durra’s slow pacing accentuates that study. 

 

To the movie’s benefit, Durra beautifully displays the archeological wonders of the city. From the Temples of Karnak and Luxor itself, to the Winter Palace hotel, Durra showcases a part of the world that thanks to COVID and the outgoing Presidency's relationship with Arab affairs, remains an unvisited destination to many Americans. However, even Rick Steve’s tourism videos jump to a snappier beat.

PLOT:

Hana is a British aid worker returning to Luxor on holiday. Scarred from scenes of an unmentioned battlefront, Hana wanders the quiet city alone until she runs into Sultan, an archaeologist and former lover. Sultan is totally Indiana Jones looking to rekindle that affair with the feisty Marion. Hana would rather play the hard-to-get Willie and has no time for love, Dr. Jones. She is shellshock and is hoping the mystery of the ancient world resets her ability to again see hope. 


Luxor is 90 minutes of Hana walking, wondering, wanting. Durra slowly provides details to Hana’s life, but those little points become lost in the stagnant plot while the biggest mystery remains unanswered. If Hana so desperately wishes to move beyond her former life, why return to the city where she knows her former boyfriend works? Lots of wonderful ruins in Ireland that are aching to be visited.

ACTING | CHARACTERS | DIALOGUE:

Hana is played by British actress Andrea Riseborough. Hana is silent and calm, although can be tempted with a drink, a smoke, and a one-night stand with a stranger. She wears the same set of pyjama-type pants for the movie’s entire span and speaks perhaps twelve lines of dialogue. 

Sultan, Hana’s once-and-possible-future beau, is the light of the movie. Charismatically played by Karim Saleh, Sultan loves his city, his job, and also yearns for Hana. Other than his obvious attraction to her, Sultan genuinely seems to care for Hana while also possessing a carefree attitude to life, a vital theme Luxor as a movie largely missed.

VISUAL EFFECTS | MAKEUP | DESIGN:

Luxor is shot entirely on location and the city is magical. From the ordinary concrete streets to the weathered temple walls, the camera fully documents how the wonderful lives alongside the common. The banality of the plot tethers the amazing view with a simplistic stride.

MUSIC | SCORE | SOUND DESIGN:

As minimalistic as the plot, so too is the music. However, the true score is that natural auditory experience. Birds are everywhere singing and chirping. Crickets provide the soundtrack of the night sky. The open sky is everywhere in the movie and so too are the creatures that inhabit those spaces.

CLOSING THOUGHTS:

Luxor is not meant to be a riotous rom com, but perhaps it should have been. The slow, piercing character study of a film is a worthy genre, yet Hana’s story has no true resolution. Her solemn attitude is frustrating as she cannot decipher the beauty that is all around her. What could have been a majestic tragedy is instead as dry and dusty as a desert road.

 

Samuel Goldwyn Films will release LUXOR on VOD & Digital - December 4th 

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CONCLUSIVE VERDICT:

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