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The Hamburg Cell

Play trailer Poster for The Hamburg Cell 2004 1h 42m Drama Play Trailer Watchlist
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Tomatometer 0 Reviews 64% Popcornmeter 250+ Ratings
A Lebanese dental student (Karim Saleh) falls in with Muslim extremists who eventually carry out the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

Audience Reviews

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Audience Member A fictionalized account of the September 11 hijackers Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/21/23 Full Review Audience Member An insightful look into the lives and minds of a group of extremists, it gives an account of the humane side of this misunderstood group. What motivates them, and leads them to feel that their actions are justified are all well put together here. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/17/23 Full Review Audience Member I am a little unclear as to why we Americans so often focus on Mohammed Atta (here played by Maral Kamel) when we talk about the September 11 hijackings. I'm pretty sure he's the one who wrote that handbook on hijacking, and that's a big deal. I know we found his luggage after, because it didn't make it onto the plane (ah, baggage handling), and I'm pretty sure the manual was in there. The thing is, though, there were eighteen other guys, and we hardly ever bring them up. I'm never entirely clear on any of their names, and I've spent a lot of time arguing with Crazy Conspiracy Theorists on the subject. Even there, the only name that comes up is Mohammed Atta. And even there, they hardly ever mention that his dad claims he's alive and well and in hiding. (His dad also blames Mossad, not al Qaeda, for the attacks.) These men have mostly ceased to exist, which may well be the right punishment, as I've said before in other contexts. Here, however, we are looking at Ziad Jarrah (Karim Saleh). He's pretty secular at the beginning of the story. He drinks, and he has a girlfriend who smokes and drinks, and he sleeps with his girlfriend. And then he gets involved with a certain mosque and certain guys, and he decides that being a good Muslim is a part of his identity that he's lost. He never really drank a lot, so far as I can tell, but he stops drinking entirely, refusing even to drink a toast to a friend who's just bought a restaurant. He argues with his girlfriend, Aysel (Agni Scott, here billed as Agni Tsangaridou), about how secular [i]she[/i] is. Still, he ends up marrying her anyway. However, they are being pulled apart by his involvement with that mosque and those men. She fears being widowed by his drive for jihad. He goes off to America to go to flight school. She visits once, then returns to Germany. When she is watching television one day, she is shocked, but I'm not sure she's really surprised. So far as I can tell, it is Jarrah who is the subject of the most debate of all the hijackers. His family claims that he was an innocent passenger, though they do not deny that he was on the plane--or have any convincing explanation (so far as I can tell, any explanation at all) for what he was doing there. There is apparently considerable doubt as to how closely he was affiliated with the others in the Hamburg Cell. He is known to have trained in Afghanistan with them. On the other hand, he had always expressed interest, even from childhood, in learning to fly--his father wouldn't let him, out of fear he would crash--and he told his family he would return to Lebanon for a cousin's wedding on the twenty-second. He even showed off the new suit he'd bought for the occasion to his landlady. However, he has been shown to have some connection to the other hijackers, and it seems implausible at best that he would have just coincidentally shared travel plans from Fort Lauderdale to Newark with them and then gotten on the same plane at Newark. The Jarrah we have here is a flawed but not evil man. Indeed, I would not say that any of them are really shown as evil. Fanatical, yes. Aysel knows that he is obsessed with jihad, and he's one of the least obsessed of the lot of them. Fundamentalists of many religious stripes despise the increasingly secular nature of the world; it isn't just Muslims who have taken violent action over it. However, these men really do believe that they're doing what's right. They believe they are striking a blow for the good of their people. Jarrah is at best confused. He was raised in a secular lifestyle--he even attended Catholic school as a child--but finds his Islamic roots to be a source of great pride and importance. They do say that converts have the strongest faith. There is some debate about whether the filmmakers should have shown the collapsing towers at the end of the film. It is certainly true that Jarrah would not have known about the success of the other flights when he boarded his own, and the first tower collapse was a scant four minutes before his own death. (It is also, of course, true that he was on the plane that crashed in Pennsylvania and had not been anywhere near the World Trade Center after just a few minutes into his flight.) However, the pattern of events that we see in the last few minutes of the film are not just a literal sequence of events. We are seeing what is going through Jarray's mind. We are seeing what Aysel is seeing. And we are seeing the changes that were about to happen to all of us. Rated 4 out of 5 stars 02/12/23 Full Review Audience Member Just ok, nothing more to say about this one... Rated 3 out of 5 stars 01/30/23 Full Review Audience Member Interesting portrait of the hijackers behind 9/11. The film is an exploration of how an individual could turn to a horrific act, what might drive them & how they could be convinced it was 'glorious' or justified. However, while presenting the motives of the attackers the film never excuses their actions- the message is emphatically anti-terrorist, and it would be a mistake to avoid the film because of some fear of 'sympathizing' with the hijackers. Understanding a person's motivation is the key to reasoning with them and resolving conflict- with that in mind, this is an important film. In other regards, the film is also well-made: performances are good, it's got style, and the choice of how to portray a climax we all remember from the news was well made. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/18/23 Full Review Audience Member Insightful film that attempts to tell the story of the 911 attacks from the perspective of the terrorists. In a sense, it humanizes them--that's important. Overall, not much positive Islam portrayed here though." Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/14/23 Full Review Read all reviews
The Hamburg Cell

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Cast & Crew

Movie Info

Synopsis A Lebanese dental student (Karim Saleh) falls in with Muslim extremists who eventually carry out the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.
Director
Antonia Bird
Producer
Finola Dwyer
Screenwriter
Ronan Bennett, Alice Perman
Genre
Drama
Original Language
English
Release Date (Streaming)
May 23, 2019
Runtime
1h 42m