Brides
A sensitive, harrowing tale of two Muslim teens running away from the UK to chase a fantasy.
-- The Movie Cricket
Part of Worldwide Wednesdays film series
Brides
Brides, Nadia Fall's compelling debut feature, premiered at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival. It offers a powerful and empathetic look into the lives of two alienated teenage girls, Doe and Muna, who leave the U.K. for Syria in search of purpose and belonging.
Brides emerges as a significant artistic achievement and a compelling debut from Nadia Fall, distinguished by its deeply empathetic narrative, sophisticated cinematic craft, and profound thematic depth. The film's narrative draws loose inspiration from real-life accounts, notably the case of the Bethnal Green trio, a group of East London schoolgirls who left home in 2015 to join ISIS.
The film's artistic merit is evident in Fall's intimate direction, Suhayla El-Bushra's emotionally nuanced screenplay, and the "stunning" performances by Ebada Hassan and Safiyya Ingar, whose chemistry anchors the narrative. Its non-linear storytelling and a predominantly female creative team offer a unique, empathetic lens into the protagonists' journey.
The film delves into the universal teenage yearning for belonging and purpose, driven by a profound sense of cultural rejection and alienation within the UK, vividly captured in Muna's poignant question, "Who's gonna give a sh*t about two brown girls?" It also meticulously portrays the insidious influence of online extremist narratives as a "slow erosion of personal identity."
By humanizing its protagonists and exploring the complex interplay of vulnerability, societal pressures, and digital manipulation, Brides challenges simplistic explanations of radicalization. This critically acclaimed, urgent, and deeply empathetic film offers a compelling cinematic experience that provokes critical thought and fosters genuine empathy, making it ideal for discerning audiences and vital societal conversations.
"Bad decisions — the kind that can be, if not reversed, at least remedied — are an essential part of adolescence: lapses that teach us about our desires, our impulses, our weaknesses, our essential character, and leave us with no greater damage than a throbbing hangover or a small, smudgy tattoo. Doe and Muna, the British 15-year-olds at the center of Brides, either haven’t been given much slack to make the right kind of wrong choices, or haven’t permitted themselves that liberty — so when they do err, it’s in seismically reckless, potentially ruinous fashion." ~ Guy Lodge, Variety
Brides emerges as a significant artistic achievement and a compelling debut from Nadia Fall, distinguished by its deeply empathetic narrative, sophisticated cinematic craft, and profound thematic depth. The film's narrative draws loose inspiration from real-life accounts, notably the case of the Bethnal Green trio, a group of East London schoolgirls who left home in 2015 to join ISIS.
The film's artistic merit is evident in Fall's intimate direction, Suhayla El-Bushra's emotionally nuanced screenplay, and the "stunning" performances by Ebada Hassan and Safiyya Ingar, whose chemistry anchors the narrative. Its non-linear storytelling and a predominantly female creative team offer a unique, empathetic lens into the protagonists' journey.
The film delves into the universal teenage yearning for belonging and purpose, driven by a profound sense of cultural rejection and alienation within the UK, vividly captured in Muna's poignant question, "Who's gonna give a sh*t about two brown girls?" It also meticulously portrays the insidious influence of online extremist narratives as a "slow erosion of personal identity."
By humanizing its protagonists and exploring the complex interplay of vulnerability, societal pressures, and digital manipulation, Brides challenges simplistic explanations of radicalization. This critically acclaimed, urgent, and deeply empathetic film offers a compelling cinematic experience that provokes critical thought and fosters genuine empathy, making it ideal for discerning audiences and vital societal conversations.
"Bad decisions — the kind that can be, if not reversed, at least remedied — are an essential part of adolescence: lapses that teach us about our desires, our impulses, our weaknesses, our essential character, and leave us with no greater damage than a throbbing hangover or a small, smudgy tattoo. Doe and Muna, the British 15-year-olds at the center of Brides, either haven’t been given much slack to make the right kind of wrong choices, or haven’t permitted themselves that liberty — so when they do err, it’s in seismically reckless, potentially ruinous fashion." ~ Guy Lodge, Variety
Genre
Drama,
Women and Film,
Worldwide Wednesdays
Runtime
93
Language
English
Director
Nadia Fall
Opening at
Claremont 5 on Sep 24th
Newhall on Sep 24th
Glendale on Sep 24th
Town Center 5 on Sep 24th
Monica Film Center on Sep 24th
Brides Get Tickets
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