Mohamed, the youngest son of Adel Emam, can rest assured that he is one of the stars of the Egyptian cinema. Yes, following 8 films, he established his feet and presented the cinema he wanted, but he is simply confused regarding what to say next.
He tried action and served it with an acceptable proportion of the muscles, but what he presented at the end of the series: “Their Uncle” by director Hussein Al-Manbawi, was a chaotic compilation of all the forms of violence that we are accustomed to from Hollywood, with a difference in the type of implementation. Previously presented: A Romantic Beh, A Dear Dream, An Hour and a Half, Captain Egypt, Hell in India, A Night Here and Sorour, and The Thief of Baghdad.
Muhammad did not strive to devise a style for him in the films, but he cared regarding the scenes of clash, destruction and the elimination of the bad in society. And his films seemed like the model presented by Jackie Chan often, so what is important is movement and the rest is wreckage. We are facing dissonant stories in one film and there are always things scattered in everything, and the problem is that they do not meet in the end.
Billions of forged dollars, and thieves depend on what is available in the printing machine and then carry whatever they want from it to anywhere, but the leaders of two gangs disagree and fall dead to win this money, which is no longer worth anything, and Muhammad Imam appears as if he is in the eye of death while he is asleep, beaten and killed but not injured Like the heroes of American films whose ammunition does not end until following the criminals or their opponents are eliminated.
In: Their uncle, we liked the actor Imam as a charisma, and we did not like the film as a cinematic construction. This text is forbidden – Wissam Sabry, and these adventures are without any value, and if they were caught through a solid text, the scenes would not have been scattered without a link between them. The participating names are many, most notably: Mahmoud Hamida, Muhammad Salam, Hoda Al-Mufti, Aiten Amer, Sayed Ragab, Bassem Samra, Ahmed Al-Fishawi, Hana Al-Zahid, Muhammad Lotfi, Riyadh Al-Khouli, Muhammad Tharwat, Ahmed Khaled Saleh, and Al-Shahat Mabrouk.