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Four Lions

  • 2010
  • R
  • 1h 37m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
88K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
3,856
202
Four Lions (2010)
Follow the misadventures of a group of British Islamic fundamentalists intent on sacrificing themselves for Allah.
Play trailer2:15
3 Videos
47 Photos
Dark ComedySatireComedyCrimeDrama

Four incompetent British terrorists set out to train for and commit an act of terror.Four incompetent British terrorists set out to train for and commit an act of terror.Four incompetent British terrorists set out to train for and commit an act of terror.

  • Director
    • Christopher Morris
  • Writers
    • Christopher Morris
    • Sam Bain
    • Jesse Armstrong
  • Stars
    • Will Adamsdale
    • Riz Ahmed
    • Adeel Akhtar
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    88K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    3,856
    202
    • Director
      • Christopher Morris
    • Writers
      • Christopher Morris
      • Sam Bain
      • Jesse Armstrong
    • Stars
      • Will Adamsdale
      • Riz Ahmed
      • Adeel Akhtar
    • 217User reviews
    • 254Critic reviews
    • 68Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 1 BAFTA Award
      • 9 wins & 24 nominations total

    Videos3

    Four Lions
    Trailer 2:15
    Four Lions
    Four Lions
    Trailer 2:04
    Four Lions
    Four Lions
    Trailer 2:04
    Four Lions
    "She's got a beard" from Four Lions
    Clip 1:53
    "She's got a beard" from Four Lions

    Photos46

    View Poster
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    + 42
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    Top cast32

    Edit
    Will Adamsdale
    Will Adamsdale
    • Alex
    Riz Ahmed
    Riz Ahmed
    • Omar
    Adeel Akhtar
    Adeel Akhtar
    • Faisal
    Kayvan Novak
    Kayvan Novak
    • Waj
    Nigel Lindsay
    Nigel Lindsay
    • Barry
    Preeya Kalidas
    Preeya Kalidas
    • Sofia
    Mohamad Akil
    • Mahmood
    • (as Mohammad Aqil)
    Craig Parkinson
    Craig Parkinson
    • Matt
    Karl Seth
    • Uncle Imran
    Waleed Elgadi
    Waleed Elgadi
    • Khalid
    • (as William El-Gardi)
    Alex Macqueen
    Alex Macqueen
    • Malcolm Storge MP
    Shameem Ahmad
    Shameem Ahmad
    • Chairwoman
    Arsher Ali
    Arsher Ali
    • Hassan
    Julia Davis
    Julia Davis
    • Alice
    Wasim Zakir
    • Ahmed
    Jonathan Maitland
    Jonathan Maitland
    • Newsreader
    • (as Jonny Maitland)
    Marcus Garvey
    Marcus Garvey
    • Marathon Policeman
    Darren Boyd
    Darren Boyd
    • Sniper
    • Director
      • Christopher Morris
    • Writers
      • Christopher Morris
      • Sam Bain
      • Jesse Armstrong
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews217

    7.388.3K
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    Featured reviews

    bladou

    Expected laughs < Actual laughs

    I'm no easy viewer and too often do I find myself being bored while watching a movie, or just barely interested.

    I wasn't expecting much from this one and after a quick reading of the synopsis, I just thought "say whaat ?". As a reminder you might check again the IMDb summary and try to picture it seriously, you would expect some "sofa talking action" - as a friend would describe movies that have more dialogs than action scenes.

    Long story short : that is, without any doubts, the most stupidly funny movie I've seen this year and if you haven't seen it already ... just go (Ok to be honest, I would also put Revenge of the Fallen even if its last year, the level of stupidity is clearly enough for a couple of years).

    Whatever you are looking in a movie this one will deliver, it is filled with dumb-touching characters despite their "mission" as terrorists. The acting is not only great as a comedy but just strait out great, any one in the movie have something special and memorable.

    Hell, you could even try to get a social commentary out of it but that'd be a long stretch, it's meant to be a comedy with a soul not just the usual "a few scenes funny and forget me next week" kind of movie.

    I was really pleased to find this gem completely by chance and hope you will too as this is how comedy films are meant to be.
    8adamonIMDb

    A rare naturally funny film

    I remember the first time I saw this film, thinking it was one of the funniest I had ever seen, and I haven't seen many that have made me laugh as much since. Chris Morris is known for black comedy and 'Four Lions' is certainly fantastically dark.

    The plot, the characters, the dialogue - everything about the film is funny. The stupidity of the main characters combined with the absurdity of their plans make this a truly hilarious film and a great piece of entertainment.

    'Four Lions' is a comedic gem. A rare naturally funny film that is guaranteed to make you laugh.
    7gary-444

    Brave Black Comedy

    Home grown Asian suicide bombers are not an obvious choice for Comedy. But Director Chris Morris makes a surprisingly good job of it in a work which is skilfully written and performed. The best humour has a ring of truth about it. And so it is true here. The plot moves from satire, to slapstick to straight forwards storytelling, and back, at quite a pace leaving the audience to make its own mind up about whether certain bits are intended to be funny, or just turn out that way. That ambiguity is probably the film's strongest suit.

    A strong cast of Jihadists struggle to get a team together, struggle to get to a Training Camp in Pakistan from which they are sent home in disgrace, indeed they struggle to complete any task successfully. Yet they are not portrayed as buffoons. Never before has Muslim culture been lampooned like this, yet Morris shows it in such a way that they are Everyman jokes and should not cause offence to anyone.

    The fact that this is low budget works to its advantage. The script and acting win and the documentary style filming gives it an authenticity which is vital for the humour to prosper. Riz Ahmed stars as Chief Jihadist Omar, but Nigel Lindsay steals the show as a Caucasian Muslim convert. Preeya Kalidas has a frustrating, underwritten role as Omar's wife. A nurse, and a mother we never really get her insight into the prospect of her husband, and father of her son, embracing martyrdom, even though she pokes fun at an over zealous cleric when he visits their home.

    At 100 minutes, the film ends when it needs to, in dramatic and compelling style and does not out stay its welcome. For some this will not be funny enough, for others it will simply be in poor taste. But we should be proud that this sort of comedy simply could not be made in America, and is the first cinematic attempt to deal with a relatively new, and disturbing, social phenomena.
    DICK STEEL

    A Nutshell Review: Four Lions

    Four Lions may be a black comedy, but the subject matter is anything but, dealing with the real threat of self radicalized men who take it upon themselves to wage what they deem is a holy war against the infidels of their religion, capitalism and Western ideals, about the men who are frighteningly misguided in their beliefs which we may find absurd, but they holding it very dearly to their hearts, nevermind if it's actually the blind leading the blind.

    Co-written and directed by Christopher Morris, the film follows the journey of a few friends and acquaintances brought together by Barry (Nigel Lindsay), a self-styled firebrand convert and Omar (Riz Ahmed) the unofficial leader who assemble like minded radicals to take on what they felt is a path of righteousness and a fast track to heaven, nevermind if for narrative purposes his recruitment tactics is questionably risky at best (not to mention funny, I did say it was a comedy). It's almost like a satire on the 101 basics on how one transforms from all talk to all action, going on trips to Pakistan to meet up with mujahedins or holy warriors in order to learn the ropes in becoming soldiers and tested in battle, to the assembling of explosives, deciding on a target and then executing it, complete with the quintessential video recordings to explain the rationale behind the deeds.

    It parodies many of what you've seen and read in the news, and while you may dismiss it as making light of dead serious situations, here's where its brilliance emerged. From within the comedy that come fast and furious that you find yourself inevitably laughing at the clueless wannabes, there are moments of poignancy especially when you realize that the wannabes have gone way past the point of no return, and with the wheels of destruction set in motion, there's no turning back really. In a way it reflects upon how detection of the clandestine activities may sometimes be stranger than fiction, but it is usually missed opportunities, especially with the countless of screw ups that go undetected, that serve as the real threat to society with prejudices and discrimination at play.

    Ultimately those who truly suffer are friends and especially family, and the story does not mince that impact even though most are centered around the closing credits in an epilogue. Family isn't far behind especially when time got devoted to focus on the ringleader's, that here's a man willing to sacrifice what's worldly for a calling so perceived higher than self and for the greater good. Not only those on the other side of the law get put in a spotlight, but how the authorities and politicians behave got their fair share of critique, though in a fashion of less being more.

    Four Lions adopted the shaky cam throughout which in a way tried to mirror a documentary, and to some this may be tiring to watch since the camera bounces around and doesn't stay still for the most parts. This is perhaps the only aspect of the film that I disliked, though you'll soon find yourself tickled if you pay close attention to the dialogue which were thoroughly filled with wickedly funny lines. The trailer may have accidentally revealed the funnier, slapstick aspects of the film, but its wit was firmly found in the spoken words.

    Riz Ahmed is as charismatic a ringleader as he can be, and Kayvan Novak plays Waj his less than intelligent friend and blind follower with a sense of sensitivity that will tug at your heart when Omar realizes what he had done, and you'll definitely feel something for the Waj character when you ponder over how many real world counterparts who exist in the real world, being all too trusting with their leaders in being lambs laid out for slaughter, conned with an ideal of a promise. Adeel Akhtar's Faisal the bomb maker will nearly always make you laugh at his naivety and sheer stupidity, being one of the characters that draw the most laughs besides Waj.

    It's easy to lapse into stereotypes and branding a message of hate, but Four Lions is nothing of that sort. What it does is to make one sit up and take notice of the troubles that are plaguing our modern day society, where there are those who do not feel inclusive, and decide to take it upon themselves to address their grievances through the use of violence. It's seriousness hidden under the guise of comedy, and I dare say you'll get more out of this film than from whatever else that's screening this week. Highly recommended!
    7rooee

    More than a meow

    With The Day Today and its more acerbic follow-up Brasseye, supreme satirist Chris Morris made a mockery of the madness of the popular media by saying what he saw. It was funny because it could have been true. With Four Lions, Morris's focus is no longer on the manipulator, but rather the manipulated. Yet by presenting this jihad suicide squad as a group of bumbling misfits, chugging along the road to apotheosis in a car fitted with dodgy "Jewish spark plugs", it's still about the madness – here, the madness of a cracked ideology believed in mostly because it's made up as it goes along.

    This is not really a film about Islam, or even religious fundamentalism, but identity. Omar (an excellent Riz Ahmed) speaks fluently about the "Church of McDonald's" and Western imperialism, and yet he's at the centre of a comfortable, suburban, upper working class family unit. Hassan (Arsher Ali) is an awkward, gangly virgin with a bone to pick with his Media Studies teacher. Barry (Nigel Lindsay, who some might remember playing a terrorist of a different creed in HBO's Rome) is white.

    For all their misadventures, there's a genuine tenderness and loyalty between these "soldiers". This is a side of Morris we've rarely seen before – an emotional spine that raises the film far above what could have resembled a series of sketches or, worse, a reel of better outtakes. Perhaps this is the film's greatest success: bringing its director out of the satirical shadows and into the comedy spotlight, and proving there's a heart to go with that clever head.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to Christopher Morris, Barry, the Jihadist group leader, was based on a former BNP member who in an attempt to out-knowledge the Asian youths he regularly assaulted, studied the Qur'an and as a result "accidentally converted himself" and became a Muslim.
    • Goofs
      When Barry is driving the group to the airport in his Citroen Xantia, he pulls over in a huff and swallows the key to stop them going. However, the key he produces and swallows is a Ford key, not a Citroen key. Additionally, the car is fitted as standard with a keypad immobiliser, requiring a security number to start - so Omar's attempt to hotwire the car would not have succeeded in real life.
    • Quotes

      Barry: [car breaks down] Fuck, Fuck, fuck it!

      Omar: Did you fix this then, Barry?

      Barry: Yes, I fixed it!

      Omar: Did ya?

      Barry: It's the parts... they're Jewish.

      Omar: What parts in a car are Jewish?

      [pause]

      Omar: Hmm?

      Fessal: Spark plugs.

      Barry: Spark plugs! Jews invented spark plugs to control global traffic.

    • Crazy credits
      The London Marathon had no involvement in the making of this film and its portrayal is entirely a work of fiction
    • Connections
      Featured in Breakfast: Episode dated 5 May 2010 (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      Nadia
      Written by Nitin Sawhney

      Performed by Jeff Beck

      Used by kind permission of Imagem Music

      Licensed courtesy of Sony BMG Records Ltd

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Four Lions?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 7, 2010 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • France
    • Languages
      • English
      • Urdu
      • Punjabi
      • Arabic
    • Also known as
      • Bốn Con Sư Tử
    • Filming locations
      • Almería, Andalucía, Spain(Pakistan scenes)
    • Production companies
      • Film4
      • Warp Films
      • Wild Bunch
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $304,616
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $41,512
      • Nov 7, 2010
    • Gross worldwide
      • $6,149,356
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 37 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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