Caramel (Sukkar banat) (PG)

11 March 2010

Cinema

A warmly-observed ensemble drama about women trying to make the best of things in a society which limits their options, Caramel is a truly open-hearted piece of filmmaking. There’s no explicit mention of the nation’s ongoing conflict here, but the salon’s rather scuffed surroundings tell their own story as writer-director Nadine Labaki also stars as a hairdresser having an illicit affair with a married man. The fact that she’s still single and living at home with her family makes this a tricky procedure, but we do wonder just how wise she is to carry on hoping her lover will leave his family. Not that life is any easier for her colleagues, one of whom is getting married, but anxious that the groom will discover she’s not technically a virgin, while the only outlet for the sexual preferences of their tomboyish fellow worker is delivering sensual scalp massages to occasionally colluding female clients.

The title, incidentally, comes from the establishment’s sugar, water and lemon juice concoction, shaped into a sticky paste and used for hair removal. Caramel is an essential beauty aid in these parts, and, as something the women do for themselves, it almost becomes a talisman of self-determination. Labaki is too generous to make all the men macho tyrants, insisting instead on the bittersweet fizz of small feminine victories in the fraught milieu she describes as ‘my Beirut’. Lovely stuff, and the largely non-professional cast are pitch perfect.

Dundee Women’s Festival – 10th Anniversary

Tickets are £5.00 (Concessions £3.00). Ticket holders are invited to attend the Dundee Women’s Festival reception in DCA before the film, at 8:00.

Director: Nadine Labaki

Duration: 1h35m

Country: France/Lebanon

Language: Arabic & French with English subtitles

Year: 2007

Format: 35mm

How to book

Book online, call 01382 909 900 or visit Box Office. We never charge booking fees.

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