Wadjda
: To buy the bike, she enters a Quran recitation competition to win the prize money.
: Al-Mansour often directed from a van using a walkie-talkie to avoid being seen working with men in public.
Wadjda (2012) is much more than a coming-of-age story about a girl and a green bicycle. It is a landmark in cinematic history—the first feature film shot entirely in Saudi Arabia and the first directed by a Saudi woman, Haifaa al-Mansour. A Quiet Rebellion Wadjda
(e.g., film students, general movie fans, human rights activists)
The story follows 10-year-old Wadjda, a spunky, Converse-wearing girl living in the suburbs of Riyadh. While her society views cycling as a threat to a girl’s virtue, Wadjda sees a green bicycle in a shop window as her ticket to freedom and a way to beat her friend Abdullah in a race. Breaking Barriers : To buy the bike, she enters a
(e.g., social media blurb, 1,000-word deep dive)
Wadjda’s journey is not one of loud protests, but of clever navigation. It is a landmark in cinematic history—the first
: By using local actors and real locations, the film captures the tension between tradition and modern desires. Themes of Resilience