God Is on Our Side (1955)
1h 39m
Running Time
January 2, 1955Release Date
God Is on Our Side (1955)
1h 39m
Running Time
January 2, 1955Release Date
Network & Production Companies

Plot.
Officer Emad says goodbye to his sweetheart Nadia as he goes to fight in the Palestine war. As the army suffers from a crippling defeat and rumors of bad weapons abound, Emad asks Nadia to search her father's papers for proof, since her father is one of the men who were involved in the weapon deals.
Where to Watch.
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Cast & Crew.

Faten Hamama
نادية

Emad Hamdy
أحمد

Mahmoud El Meligy

Magda
Actress

Magda Al Sabahi

Shoukry Sarhan
محسن

Hussein Reyaad

Olwiya Gamil

Serag Mounir

Amira Amir

Said Abou Bakr

Olwiyya Gamil
Actress

Stephan Rosti

Abdelhalim Nasr
Cinematographer

Hussein Asar
الخادم الحج مدبولي

Rashad Hamed
ظابط صوان العزاء

Anwar Zaky
صاحب كمين القتل

Abdelalim Khattab
ظابط في اجتماع ليلة 22 يوليو

Motawie Eweiss
أنقذ أحمد عند محاولة قتله

Abbas El Daly
حارس

Shaladimo
من المواطنيين الشعبين

Abdel Moneim Saudi
الطبيب

Mahmoud Al-Sabaa
عضو في مجلس الشورى

Said Khalil
جندي

Mahmoud Azmy
ضابط

Ahmad Badrakhan
Director / Dialogue / Scenario Writer

Ihsan Abdel Quddous
Story

Emile Bahri
Editor

Abdel Halim Nasr
Director of Photography

Sami Dawood
Dialogue

Nasry Abdel Nour
Sound Director

Mahmoud Ismail

Gomaa Edriss

Tousoun Motamad

Ibrahim Heshmat

Lotfi El Hakim

Mona Fouad

Fouad Al-Mohandes

Liz and Lynn

Fatema El Silahdar

Mohamed Attia
Media.

Details.
Release DateJanuary 2, 1955
Original Nameالله معنا
StatusReleased
Running Time1h 39m
Genres
Last updated:
This Movie Is About.
black and white
Wiki.
Allah maana (Arabic: الله معنا, lit. “God Is on Our Side”) is an Egyptian film released in 1955. Premiering on November 14 of that year, it was directed by Ahmed Badrakhan with a screenplay co-written by him and Ihsan Abdel Quddous and an all-star cast including Faten Hamama, Emad Hamdy, Magda al-Sabahi, and Mahmoud el-Meliguy. The film was censored to the point of almost preventing release, according to film critic and historian Aly Abou Shadi, over the portrayal of 1952 coup leader Mohammed Naguib. It was saved by Gamal Abdel Nasser’s approval, underlined by his attending the premiere at the Rivoli Cinema.