Brahim Hadjadj
Brahim Hadjadj (إبراهيم حجاج) (January 31, 1934 - March 8, 1996) was an Algerian actor. His career began with the film "The Battle of Algiers" (1966), directed by the Italian Gillo Pontecorvo. The 32-year-old actor plays the leading role, that of the Algerian revolutionary hero Ali Ammar (1930-1957), known under the pseudonym "Ali La Pointe". The film received several awards and nominations including the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival in 1966, Pontecorvo received the Oscar for best director in 1979. The success of "The Battle of Algiers" is global, and Brahim Hadjadj becomes the radiant face of Algeria and the country's number one actor. In the minds of all Algerians he becomes "Ali La Pointe", in a film which exposes to the world the abuses of the French colonial army under the cover of "pacification campaigns", previously censored by the French media. Brahim Hadjadj becomes in the middle of the sixties, the rebel hero, glamorous icon of an entire youth who believes that a more egalitarian world is possible. Around the attribution of the role of Ali La Pointe to Brahim Hadjadj, there is a whole mythology, some say that the director Gillo Pontecorvo sitting at the terrace of the Tantonville café in Algiers, saw Hadjadj passing by by chance and offered him the role. Wild casting or not, Gillo Pontecorvo found the naturalness, spontaneity and grace he was looking for in Brahim, for his reality cinema film which he wanted to be as close as possible to a documentary. Brahim Hadjadj goes from shadow to light after "The Battle of Algiers", without any dramatic training and a basic level of school studies, neither prepared nor supervised, he finds himself hounded by the press, bombarded with questions, which according to him, exceeded his cultural level. The actor, overwhelmed by his new status, still lives as before, day by day. Gillo Pontecorvo, thought of him to play the role of the anticolonial revolutionary José Dolores in his new film “Queimada” (1969). Brahim Hadjadj, then without an agent to manage his career and unpunctual, gave rise to serious doubts in the production company which considered him risky for such a substantial project. Brahim Hadjadj unreachable, the production opts for the Colombian actor Evaristo Márquez who shares the poster with the legend Marlon Brando. Brahim continued his career with Luchino Visconti in 1967 in "The Stranger", in 1969 in "L'Opium Et Le Bâton" by Ahmed Rachedi, in the role of Omar, in 1971 in "Patrouille À l'Est" by Amar Laskri, in 1974 Ahmed Rachedi in "The Finger in the Gear", in 1975 Mohammed Lakhdar-Hamina in the cult "Chronique Des Années De Braise", in 1986 he is Si Omar in "The Roaring Years of the Twist" by Mahmoud Zemmouri... In the 90s, in the middle of the dark decade, bomb attacks increased in Algiers and throughout the country, culture was no longer a priority for institutions, and a good number of intellectuals, journalists and artists, threatened, flee the country. The last years of Brahim Hadjadj's life, in the suburbs of the Algerian capital, in the Cherarba district, were difficult. Hadjadj is diagnosed with a brain tumor. While it took time to raise the funds to send him abroad for surgery, he died on March 8, 1996 in Algiers.
The Battle of Algiers
as Ali La PointeTracing the struggle of the Algerian Front de Liberation Nationale to gain freedom from French...
Movie pageThe Stranger
as ArabMeursault is a man who feels utterly isolated from everyone and everything around him. This...
Movie pageChronicle of the Years of Fire
as uncreditedA meticulous chronicle of the evolution of the Algerian national movement from 1939 until the...
Movie pageA Propos D'Un Crime
as SelfIn 1967, Visconti came to Algiers for the filming of The Stranger with Mastroianni and Anna...
Movie pageFive Directors On The Battle of Algiers
as Ali La Pointe (archive footage)This 17-minute documentary is featured on the 3-Disc Criterion Collection DVD of The Battle of...
Movie pageOpium and the Stick
as OmarIn 1950, in Algeria, in a village in Kabylia, Algerian resistance fighters resisted the French...
Movie pageThe Outlaws
as Le CharretierIn prison in colonial Algeria, shortly after the end of the Second World War, three indigenous...
Movie pageLa Bataille d'Alger, l'empreinte
as Ali La Pointe (archive footage)Cheikh Djemaï looks back on the genesis of Gillo Pontecorvo’s feature film, The Battle of...
Movie pageL'Histoire Du Film "La Bataille D'Alger"
as Ali La Pointe (archive footage)More than fifty years after the release of the film “The Battle of Algiers” in theaters in June...
Movie pageMarxist Poetry: The Making of The Battle of Algiers
as Ali La Pointe (archive footage)To commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of THE BATTLE OF ALGIERS, we revisited our edit of the...
Movie pageLes Folles Années du Twist
as Si OmarA small town in Algeria, in the years 1960-1962. Two young idle boys and rock fans, Boualem and...
Movie pagePatrol in the East
as uncreditedThe film traces the story of a patrol of the Algerian National Liberation Army (ALN), whose...
Movie pageThe Empire of Dreams
as Le VoyouA stubborn director who wants to rediscover the Algiers of his childhood comes up against the...
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