Soft Hands (1963)
December 29, 1963Release Date
Plot.
Where to Watch.
Cast & Crew.
Ahmed Mazhar
البرنس شوكت حلمي
Sabah
كريمة عبدالسلام / Songs
Salah Zulfikar
الدكتور حمودة
Mariam Fakhr Eddine
البرنسيسة جيهان شوكت حلمي
Wedad Hamdy
ظاظا - زوجة تاجر المواشي
Laila Taher
البرنسيسة ميرفت شوكت حلمي
Ahmed Loxer
النبيل عماد
Abdel Ghani El Nagdi
سفرجي
Hussain Ismael
زغلول - سفرجي
Ali Khairallah
Cinematographer
Ahmed Khamis
سالم عبدالسلام
Kamel Anwar
لولو - تاجر المواشى
Hussein Asar
الحاج عبدالسلام
Abbas El Daly
بائع البسبوسه
Edmond Tuima
صاحب شركة الإسطوانات
Mohamed Edriss
عثمان - سفرجي
Anwar Madkour
مدير شركة سينما
Abdel Hameed Badawy
احد الديانه
Motawie Eweiss
بائع الخضار
Abdel Mohsen Selim
موظف في شركة السينما
Saleh al-Eskandarani
بائع الذرة المشوية
Tousoun Motamad
بائع الفراخ
Mahmoud Zulfiqar
Director
Tawfiq Al-Hakim
Writer
Fekri Rostom
Editor
Antoine Polizois
Decorator
نجيب خوري
Scenic Artist
Sayed Ismaeil
Production Manager
Wadid Sirry
Director of Photography
Abdel Hamid Zaki
Production Manager
Nasry Abdel Nour
Sound Engineer
Fathy Koura
Lyricist
محمد الموجي
Music
Youssef Gohar
Screenplay / Writer
علي إسماعيل
Music
Abdel Aziz Gad
Assistant Director
حسين السيد
Lyricist
Mustafa Imam
Assistant Camera
Zeinab Eweiss
Negative Cutter
Rashad Ibrahim
Mohammad Morgan
Media.
Details.
Release DateDecember 29, 1963
Original Nameالأيدي الناعمة
StatusReleased
Running Time2h 17m
Genres
Last updated:
This Movie Is About.
Wiki.
Soft Hands (Arabic: الأيدي الناعمة, translit.al-aydi al-nā'ima) is a 1963 Egyptian comedy film directed by Mahmoud Zulfikar. It is based on a play of the same name by Egyptian playwright Tawfiq al-Hakim (1953). It features an ensemble cast that includes Sabah, Salah Zulfikar, Ahmed Mazhar, Mariam Fakhr Eddine and Laila Taher. The film was entered into the 14th Berlin International Film Festival. The film a member of the Top 100 Egyptian films list.The plot involves a formerly landed aristocrat dispossessed by the 1952 Egyptian Revolution. The plot follows the aristocrat's struggle coming to terms with the reality of needing to work for a living, after being stripped of all landownership. He meets a similarly jobless doctorate in the Arabic language, who, like him, is not willing to accept a job below his stature. Both must adjust to the new social and political realities in a new Nasserite socialist Egypt.