Source: British High Commission Windhoek |

Namibian Premiere of British film "Room To Rent"

The British film "Room To Rent" will premiere in Namibia this week as part of the 5th EUNIC Film Festival

Room to Rent is a bitter sweet comedy about Ali, a young Egyptian screen-writer determined to succeed in London

WINDHOEK, Namibia, October 4, 2016/APO/ --

As part of the EUNIC Film Festival 2016, under the theme “Migration & Solidarity”, the British Council and the British High Commission presents the Namibian Premiere of “Room to Rent” (Khaled El Hagar, UK/Egypt, 2000, 97 min) on Saturday, 08 October, 7pm, UN Plaza, Katutura, Free entrance.

Room to Rent is a bitter sweet comedy about Ali, a young Egyptian screen-writer determined to succeed in London. He loves the artistic and political freedom, the colours, the music and the individualism. But Britain isn’t an easy place for a foreigner to break through. No-one takes his work seriously and he has to scrape an illegal living in ‘Arab’ London as a waiter and Arabic voice over artist. With his student visa about to expire and a highly unsatisfactory relationship with married Vivienne, a French woman who more or less pays him to have sex, life is not easy. On the same day his visa extension is refused, a strange old blind woman accosts him on a train, plus he has a fight with his landlord and his thrown out of his lodgings. His friend Ahmed, a street wise hustler, thinks Ali should scrape together £3000 and buy a passport by entering into a fake marriage with a British woman - supplied with Ahmed if he wants to stay. With little money, a student visa and no home, Ali sees no alternative. However, a series of relationships in different London ‘rooms to rent’ soon have a major impact on his future . . .

Inspired by El Hagar’s own experiences living in London, the bittersweet comedy tells the story of Egyptian writer Ali, who is struggling to stay afloat in London as his visa runs out. His only hope of staying on is to find a British woman who is willing to marry him. The trouble is fake marriages cost money, something Ali is a little short of. Finding somewhere to live is also far from straightforward. Along the way he encounters photographer Mark (Rupert Graves), an unstable young woman Linda (Juliette Lewis), whom Ali falls in love with, and ageing faith healer Miss Stevenson (Anna Massey), who thinks he is the reincarnation of her Egyptian lover.

The British contribution to EUNIC 2016, “Room To Rent”, was selected by local film critic and film curator Hans-Christian Mahnke, AfricAvenir.

Distributed by APO Group on behalf of British High Commission Windhoek.