Documentary film A Comedian in a Syrian Tragedy
An intimate portrait of Syrian actor Fares Helou, who calls for freedom of speech, is forced out of his home country and experiences the absurdities of exiled existence, told by Syrian director Rami Farah, who films - and shares - his struggle.
This film is a chronicle of an uprising and of exile. In the midst of the early months of the Syrian revolution director Rami Farah decides to follow the Syrian actor Fares Helou with his camera. Fares is one of the first Syrian star actors to take a stand publicly against the Bashar al-Assad regime. Fares joins a demonstration and he and soon after he and his family start to receive threats. Fares has to go underground, which is not easy when your face and voices is recognised by everyone everywhere. He worries about his Art Centre – Al Bustan, which he is trying to create as a free space for artists of all kinds. Soon after the art centre is smashed by the regime. Fares leaves Syria and go to France. Rami follows with Fares’ wife and children. They both believe that they will soon be back in a free Damascus. But Syria falls apart, and neither the actor nor the director has a script for this new chapter in their lives: Exile. A chapter full of questions, disappointments and alienation, but also of hope and of cultural confusion that calls for laughter. A Comedian in a Syrian Tragedy is an intimate observation of the absurdity of (exiled) existence.