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Egyptian Shooting Club (Arabic: نادي الصيد المصري, Nadi El Said) is an Egyptian club based in Giza, Egypt with several branches in Dokki, 6th of October City, Katamya, Port Said and Alexandria. The original idea of the club was to provide an area for all Egyptian shooters to express their hobby.
Egypt was one of the few countries of the Arab world and Middle East to be able to establish a film industry during their colonization. However, the types of films that were shot in Egypt at the time were more direct-cinema-styled documentaries or news reels. [5] Eventually, they did more news reels and also began creating short films.
The Crime (Arabic: الجريمة, transliterated as El-Gareema) is an Egyptian film.The film is directed and written by Sherif Arafa, and it stars Ahmed Ezz, Menna Shalabi, Maged El Kedwany, Ryad El Khouly, and Sayed Ragab.
Azmy Mehelba (born 26 March 1991) is an Egyptian sport Olympic shooter, who began shooting at age 11. He was selected to join the Egyptian national men skeet shooting team at the age of 14 and participated in his first international competition at age 15.
Franco Piero Donato (Arabic: فرانكو بيرو دوناتو; born September 8, 1981, in Cairo) is an Egyptian skeet sport shooter. [2] Donato represented Egypt at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, where he competed in the men's skeet shooting.
The book and film would inspire other filmmakers to pick up cameras and make no-budget movies. [8] Pi, directed by Darren Aronofsky, [9] was made on a budget of $68,000. It proved to be a financial success at the box office ($4.6 million gross worldwide). [10]
Southcliffe is a British drama series that aired on Channel 4.Set in a fictional town on the North Kent Marshes, it employs a nonlinear narrative structure to tell the story of a series of shootings by a local man portrayed by Sean Harris, the cause of the shootings and the effects on the town and residents.
Cairo is a 1963 American crime film starring George Sanders, Richard Johnson, and Walter Rilla.Directed by Wolf Rilla (Walter's son) and written by Joan LaCour Scott, it was released on August 21, 1963, by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.