The 26th edition of the Rotterdam Arab Film Festival is bringing a rich lineup of Egyptian cinema to the Netherlands from 10–14 June 2026, and honestly, the selection could not be more varied. From deeply personal documentaries to politically charged dramas and bittersweet stories about memory, migration, and family, these films show just how wide and exciting contemporary Egyptian cinema has become. Some are intimate and quiet, others sprawling and emotional, but all of them leave a mark long after the credits roll.
The Stories — Directed by Abu Bakr Shawky
Leave it to Abu Bakr Shawky to turn pen-pal letters into an emotional historical epic.
The Stories begins in Egypt during the summer of 1967, when Ahmed receives a response from Liz, an Austrian woman replying to his search for a pen pal. From there, the film follows decades of friendship, dreams, disappointments, and political upheaval stretching into the 1980s.
Ahmed dreams of becoming a pianist, but life keeps throwing obstacles in his way. Liz, meanwhile, becomes a steady emotional anchor from afar, encouraging him through wars, economic hardship, and personal struggles. The relationship unfolds through letters, memories, and changing times.
What gives the film extra emotional texture is its autobiographical inspiration. Shawky drew from the real-life story of his Egyptian father and Austrian mother, who also connected through correspondence. The film blends archival footage with recreated scenes, making history feel lived-in rather than distant textbook material.
And honestly, there’s something wonderfully cinematic about old-fashioned letters carrying entire emotional worlds across continents.
50 Meters — Directed by Yomna Khattab
If there’s one film in the lineup that feels like opening someone’s diary while they’re trying to figure life out, it’s 50 Meters. Set around a water aerobics training pool filled with men over seventy, the documentary follows first-time director Yomna Khattab as she struggles to complete her film — and unexpectedly turns the camera toward her emotionally distant father.
What starts as a filmmaking process slowly transforms into something much more personal. Through imagined scenes, narration drafts, and vulnerable conversations, Yomna peels away years of silence between herself and her father. The result is gentle, awkward, emotional, and surprisingly funny in places. It’s less about swimming pools and more about emotional deep-dives.
The beauty of 50 Meters lies in how quietly honest it feels. No dramatic explosions, no forced sentimentality — just a daughter trying to understand herself through cinema, and maybe understanding her father along the way.
A Citizen, a Detective and a Thief — Directed by Daoud Abdel Sayed
This special tribute screening honors legendary Egyptian filmmaker Daoud Abdel Sayed, and the choice of film could not be more fitting. A Citizen, a Detective and a Thief is one of those movies that refuses to sit comfortably inside a single genre. It’s a thriller, a comedy, a philosophical reflection, and a love letter to Cairo all at once.
The story follows three men — a writer, a detective, and a thief — whose lives become tangled together in unexpected ways. Set in early 21st-century Cairo, the film uses sharp humor and social satire to poke at the absurdities of Egyptian society while still feeling deeply human.
Abdel Sayed had a remarkable ability to capture everyday Egyptian life with warmth and intelligence, and this film showcases that talent beautifully. The tribute screening also carries emotional weight following the director’s passing in December 2025. So this isn’t just a screening — it’s a celebration of a filmmaker whose work shaped generations of Arab cinema lovers.

Aisha Can’t Fly Away — Directed by Morad Mostafa
Few films this year sound as emotionally intense and visually immersive as Aisha Can’t Fly Away. Morad Mostafa tells the story of Aisha, a 26-year-old Sudanese home care worker living in Cairo without legal residency. She moves through the city carefully, almost invisibly, trying not to attract attention while juggling work, fear, love, and survival.
The film doesn’t treat Cairo as a postcard backdrop. Instead, the city feels heavy, crowded, and emotionally charged — a place where Aisha constantly negotiates safety and belonging. There’s an unspoken romance, a gangster demanding favors in exchange for protection, and a growing sense that reality itself is starting to blur around her.
What makes the film stand out is how closely the camera stays with Aisha. Every glance and silence matters. Mostafa approaches migrant life with empathy rather than spectacle, creating a film that feels deeply personal instead of politically performative. It’s the kind of movie that quietly sneaks up on you emotionally.
Life After Siham — Directed by Namir Abdel Messeeh
Bring tissues. Possibly several.
Life After Siham is an intimate documentary about grief, memory, and trying to hold onto someone after they’re gone. After losing his mother Siham, filmmaker Namir Abdel Messeeh struggles to process her absence. So he does what filmmakers do best: he starts searching through stories, family memories, photographs, and cinema itself.
The documentary moves between Egypt and France, exploring identity, exile, and family history while weaving in references to the films of legendary Egyptian director Youssef Chahine. Cinema becomes both comfort and compass — a way to mourn, remember, and reconnect.
Despite its heavy themes, the film sounds deeply tender rather than overwhelmingly sad. It understands that grief isn’t always dramatic; sometimes it’s quiet, fragmented, even strangely beautiful. After premiering at Cannes in 2025, the documentary went on to win the El Gouna Star Award for Best Arab Documentary, which only adds to the growing buzz around it.
The Egyptian selections at Rotterdam Arab Film Festival 2026 feel beautifully balanced: intimate personal stories sit beside socially charged dramas and cinematic tributes to legendary filmmakers. Together, these films paint a vivid picture of modern Egyptian storytelling — bold, emotional, reflective, and unafraid to ask difficult questions. Whether audiences come for nostalgia, politics, family drama, or artistic experimentation, this lineup promises plenty to talk about long after the festival lights dim.
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