Tango of Yearning
Tango of Yearning

Tango of Yearning (1998) is the first episode of an autobiographical trilogy on postwar Lebanon, later including Nightfall (2000) and Civil War (2002). Taking its title from Tango of Hope, a classic ballad by Nur al-Huda, the film draws from the director’s reflections on war, love, and cinema, as well as his personal experience at the public television channel TéléLiban. Conjuring various snippets of audiovisual archival material, the film is a poetic elegy to film, Beirut’s movie theaters, and a city undergoing radical transformation. Mohamed Soueid has long been a proponent of the experimental video documentary movement in Lebanon, playing a significant role in the country’s creative renaissance since the end of the civil war. Originally trained as a news videographer during the war, the experience offered him a facility with the medium, which he further developed by making non-linear documentary films with a distinctly personal take.

Similar Movies

8-8-88 Church of Satan Mansonite Rally
Zombies: When the Dead Walk
Hoxsey: When Healing Becomes a Crime
Echo of the Mountain
Happy on the Ground: 8 Days at Grammy Camp
The Making of 'Close Encounters of the Third Kind'
Princely Toys: One Man's Private Kingdom
Chris Brown: Welcome to My Life
A Natural History of Laughter
Urbanites - You Can't Rewind The Years
Imortal Tricolor - 100 Anos De Glória
Boujad: A Nest in the Heat
To You, Wherever You Are
The Rise of the Synths
The Real Beauty and the Beast
A Imagem da Música - Os Anos de Influência da MTV Brasil
The Sun and Richard Lippold
I Was, I Am, I Will Be
Green Day: The Early Years