WIRE โ€” What do spaghetti dinners, awkward shopping trips, and puberty have in common? They are in scenes in one of the best Egyptian short films of the year. The short film, 32B: Mashakel Dakhilia (32B: Internal Conflicts), 2026, takes a topic Egyptian cinema usually tiptoes around and turns it into something funny, warm, and surprisingly heartfelt. Directed by the Egyptian Mohamed Taher in an impressively confident debut and written by Egyptian scriptwriter Haitham Dabbour, the film follows a widowed father trying and struggling to figure out how to tell his teenage daughter that she has become old enough to start wearing a bra. What unfolds is a refreshingly honest look at fatherhood, vulnerability, and the awkwardness of growing up, all wrapped inside a dark comedy that feels incredibly real. But, what truly makes 32B stand out is that it gives Egyptian audiences something they rarely see on screen: a man who is emotionally present, actively trying, and completely human. The film takes an intimate look at fatherhood, vulnerability, and the emotional silence that often exists inside Egyptian families. Produced through a collaboration between the United Nations Population Fund and the RoyalContinue reading "32B: The Beauty of an Egyptian Father Trying His Best" The post 32B: The Beauty of an Egyptian Father Trying His Best first appeared on Egyptian Streets.

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