What’s Hot

  • The Director Naji Abu Nowar shows no signs of amateurism, this being his first film as he has really played well with human emotions in a fine drama. Brotherhood over survival – a delicate situation in any man’s life has been shrewdly shown on screen by him. When a kid is involved, it becomes more complex which has been handled with diligence as well!
  • The vast expanse of the Wadi Rum desert, where most of the story happens is picturesquely captured and the emptiness is palpable with the wide frames used by Wolfgang Thaler’s cinematography. With primarily static backdrops, timely camera movements used have been instrumental to tell part of the story.
  • When unexpected events happen to the characters on screen, the feel is brought down to the viewers with sharp sounds such as bullets fired out of the blue that ring in the ears, plonking buckets into water in the wells which don’t need correlating visuals. The sounds raised by raiders to keep the brothers awake at the ambush site, is notably well designed.

What’s Not

  • Though the core concept from the director is well translated on screen, the pace at which the events progress seem to raise concerns over the screenplay, which could have differently orchestrated. The ending in particular lacks impact probably due to the linear approach which appears to end abruptly.

Badges

Direction
Cinematography
Sound Design

Verdict

Verdict Stamp

Theeb, just like the intriguing nature of its title, delicately presents the story of a young desert semi-nomadic tribesman faced with life challenging situations. With delicate human emotions at the fore, the technical prowess overshadows the sluggish pace to make it an exquisite creation!