Highlights
Scream 7 - Featurette
Scream 7
Rooster - Officially Renewed for Season 2
Rooster
Euphoria Season 3 - Saddle Up Clip
Euphoria
The Sheep Detectives - Official Poster
The Sheep Detectives
Thrash - When Disaster Meets the Deep Clip
Thrash
Mutiny - Official Poster
Mutiny
The Dinosaurs Season 1 - Ankylosaurus vs. T-Rex Clip
The Dinosaurs
Wild Horse Nine - First Look at Steve Buscemi
Wild Horse Nine
Lee Cronin's The Mummy - What Happened to Their Daughter Clip
Lee Cronin's The Mummy
PAW Patrol: The Dino Movie - First Look at The Pups
PAW Patrol: The Dino Movie
Noah Wyle Wins at the 32nd Annual Actor Awards - The Pitt
The Pitt
Mother Mary - Michaela Coel Character Poster
Mother Mary
Zootopia 2 - Toolkit Preview Clip
Zootopia 2
Outcome - Keanu Reeves, Matt Bomer, Cameron Diaz and Jonah Hill at the World Premiere
Outcome

Mohamed Bouamari

Mohamed Bouamari
Latest Trailers
Birthday
January 1st, 1941
From
Guidjel, Algérie
Director

Mohamed Bouamari Biography

Born in Guidjel, near Sétif in Algeria in 1941, Mohamed Bouamari (محمد بوعمري) is an Algerian actor and director. Self-taught, in 1961 he received a scholarship from the UNEF to study film set careers in France. Returning to Algiers in 1965, he became an assistant to the filmmaker Mohamed Lakhdar-Hamina on "Le Vent des Aurès" in 1966, then to Costa Gavras on "Z" in 1969 and to Jean-Louis Bertucelli on "Remparts d'Argile" in 1969).

Bouamari made his first feature film as director in 1972, with "Le Charbonnier", a film which was selected in several international festivals, including La Semaine de la Critique in Cannes, and which attracted attention. In the wake of this first work which ranks him among the progressive filmmakers bringing to the screen the effects of the Algerian agrarian revolution, he then directed "L'Héritage" (1974), and continued the vein that would remain his own, that of a committed filmmaker, in search of a revolutionary national aesthetic, whose favorite themes are the war of independence, the denunciation of contemporary feudalism and the cause of the condition of Algerian women and his own wife, Fettouma Ousliha, will play the heroine of his films.

The rest of his work, from “Premier Pas” (1974) to “Refus” (1982), will bear witness to these commitments. Mohamed Bouamari last appeared on screen in 2005, in Djamila Sahraoui's film, "Barakat". He died of a heart attack on Friday December 1, 2006 in Algiers, at the age of 65 while he was finishing his fiction film "The Sheep".

Show More

Mohamed Bouamari Movies

Trending Celebrities