Miami Vice
The cocaine cowboys of the '80s are gone, but Miami's Casablanca allure, the undercover cops and the attitudes of Mich...
Spanning from 1948 to the present day, Elia Suleiman's poignant and semi-autobiographical drama, The Time That Remains, chronicles the life of a Palestinian family, and a nation, through moments of profound change and quiet endurance. Framed through the eyes of Fuad, a character based on the director's father and later played by Elia Suleiman himself, the film unfolds in a series of elegantly composed vignettes that capture the absurdities, tragedies, and resilient humor of daily life under occupation. We witness his father, Ali Suliman, as a young blacksmith navigating the shock of the 1948 war, and follow the family through the decades as they adapt, resist, and simply persist in their Nazareth home. With a masterful blend of stark historical reality and surreal, often silent comedy, the film paints an intimate portrait of memory, loss, and the unspoken bonds that tie a people to their land, all observed through Elia Suleiman's uniquely still and contemplative lens.