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Free Trip to Egypt

Play trailer 2:18 Poster for Free Trip to Egypt Released May 31, 2019 1h 38m Documentary Play Trailer Watchlist
Watchlist Tomatometer Popcornmeter
79% Tomatometer 14 Reviews 81% Popcornmeter Fewer than 50 Ratings
Reaching out to the very people who fear him, a Muslim man travels to the United States and offers a diverse group of Americans a free trip to Egypt.

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Free Trip to Egypt

Critics Reviews

View All (14) Critics Reviews
Kimber Myers Los Angeles Times There's nothing particularly sophisticated about the filmmaking in "Free Trip to Egypt," but first-time feature director Ingrid Serban succeeds in telling a simple story in a simple fashion, and it's an effectively moving effort. Jun 7, 2019 Full Review John DeFore The Hollywood Reporter Gently observing how many of our fellow Americans are full of fear while trying, in its tiny way, to do something about that, Ingrid Serban's Free Trip to Egypt offers just that to a handful of travelers. May 30, 2019 Full Review Chris Knight National Post Kidding aside, Free Trip to Egypt is a sweet story, but ultimately a little thin. Rated: 2.5/5 Aug 9, 2019 Full Review Anne Brodie What She Said There were some uplifting moments and some real embarrassments, but overall it was intense, and a real eye-opener. Aug 1, 2019 Full Review Ken Eisner Georgia Straight As with lunch, nothing is really free, but the trip here is still worth taking. Aug 1, 2019 Full Review Liam Lacey Original Cin There's something of a "nice Borat" quality to this sweet-but-slight documentary. It confirms its premise that exposure vanquishes bigotry (though its sample size is small). Rated: B-minus Aug 1, 2019 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

View All (15) audience reviews
Csar Highly recommend. Never preachy. Just a fascinating sociological experiment on what happens if, in the face of fear, we extend ourselves in kindness and see what happens. A great, thought-provoking conversation deepener for people of all backgrounds and political persuasions. Kudos to the filmmaker and his team for a brilliant, very timely idea. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 06/14/19 Full Review Jan I liked the light humorous touch of the first half of the movie. I thought it spoke for itself. The second half with the panel discussion was preaching to the choir and reminded me of a graduate seminar. Many people left after a few minutes of that. Either the original film footage touched your heart or it didn't. I can't imagine it wouldn't change everyone's heart to some degree or other, a truely feel good, attitude changing experience. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 06/13/19 Full Review Audience Member I thought that it was great! People took a chance and went to Egypt, got out of their narrow comfort zone and discovered that people have more common traits and interests than differences. It gets high marks with everything. I hosted a showing of this movie in my town, after seeing it in the Summer of 2019. Many people thanked me for bringing the movie to the area. Several people wanted to host their own screening. It does NOT include info about any religious or political view point. The focus of the film is to bridge the gap between cultures. It does this BEAUTIFULLY!! Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/27/23 Full Review Audience Member Despite some clunky cinematography and a story bigger than what could reasonably be done with the time and ressources given, this documentary manages to attain its goal of allowing us to witness what happens when you bring seemingly different people together. A very human story. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 02/10/23 Full Review Audience Member Uplifting - and fun at the same time Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 02/18/23 Full Review john s WALK LIKE AN EGYPTIAN "I'm so racist I can't stand it," declares Ellen. Pretty soon she's riding a camel in Cairo. A perfect subject for Tarek Mounib's "calling" of a film: to bring red State Americans into the welcoming hands of Egyptian Muslims, to facilitate some kind of discussion. Easier said than done, turns out not many Trumpeters are eager to fly into the middle of the Middle East, even on Mounib's all inclusive dime. But soon enough, a lucky seven are experiencing their fish out of water experience in the desert. Eager to start conversations instead of preaching and teaching, Mounib pairs the Yanks with inviting Egyptian counterparts, and that's when the movie shines. All touristy bits aside (thankfully they are few), it is the frank connections made in muslim homes that stirs this melting pot. Some see the light. Some remain blinded. Some have staggering personal revelations. Others appear unmoved. But all have the experience of a lifetime. As a documentary, "Free Trip To Egypt" works mainly because of Mounib's unrelenting optimism, unabashed cheerfulness, huggy good vibes, and discreet apolitical approach. He is the perfect conduit host for this experiment, and more importantly, someone who has actually done something with his calling. - hipCRANK Rated 4 out of 5 stars 03/30/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Free Trip to Egypt

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Movie Info

Synopsis Reaching out to the very people who fear him, a Muslim man travels to the United States and offers a diverse group of Americans a free trip to Egypt.
Director
Ingrid Serban
Producer
Yasmin Kamel, Tarek Mounib, Forest Sun
Distributor
Kindness Films
Production Co
Kindness Films
Genre
Documentary
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
May 31, 2019, Limited
Release Date (Streaming)
Jul 24, 2020
Box Office (Gross USA)
$120.7K
Runtime
1h 38m
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