Brides
Hope is radical. So is friendship.
Teenage best friends Doe and Muna are heading off on what seems like the trip of a lifetime. Quiet, observant Doe hasn’t travelled since arriving in the UK as a Somali refugee aged three. Muna, sharp and fearless with Pakistani roots, leads them through airport security and into the unknown. But this isn’t a holiday. The girls are bound for Istanbul, planning to cross into Syria to begin a new life they believe holds purpose and meaning. When their fixer fails to appear, panic sets in, but turning back isn’t an option. Alone in a foreign city, they must improvise fast, pushing the limits of their courage, their faith, and their friendship.
Trailers & Videos

Official UK Trailer

Brides director Nadia Fall, writer Suhayla El-Bushra and actors Ebada Hassan and Safiyya Ingar | Q&A

Interview with Director Nadia Fall

In cinemas now

Interview with Nadia Fall, Ebada Hassan & Safiyya Ingar

Highlights of BRIDES at EIFF (UK premiere)

Nadia Fall introduces the UK premiere of BRIDES

Two teenage girls run away chasing promises of a better life as ISIS brides in Syria.

Meet the Artist 2025: Nadia Fall on “Brides”
Cast

Ebada Hassan
Doe

Safiyya Ingar
Muna

Yusra Warsama
Kadija

Cemre Ebüzziya
Zeynep

Aziz Çapkurt
Barış

Leo Bill
Jon

Ali Khan
Samir

Amanda Lawrence
Miss Westgate

Mitchell Brown
Kyle

Laura Dalgleish
Colette

Syreeta Kumar
Mrs. Mamoon

Elodie Wilton
Loveday

Arthur Darvill
Mr. Hansard

Aliye Honey
Aiyla

Jay Varsani
Isaam

Kathryn Hanke
Female Security Guard

Susku Ekim Kaya
Elif

Tuncay Gunes
Another Man

Derya Durmaz
Zeynep's mum
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Reviews
CinemaSerf
Two disillusioned British girls find themselves flying from London to Istanbul where they are to meet someone who will take them on to war torn Syria. Sadly for them, things at the Bean Kafe don’t go quite to plan and they have to improvise, think on their feet, and make their own way to their destination. We are never quite sure what their ultimate goal is, here, but as we follow their adventures we learn a little more about what motivated the more extrovert “Muna” (Safiyya Ingar) and her more subdued travel companion “Doe” (Ebada Hassan). The latter was having an hard time at school from an obnoxious bully, and her mum’s new choice of boyfriend wasn’t impressing her much either. “Muna” came from a more established, stable, background but with both of them exasperated and feeling that their lives were empty and meaningless, they sealed quite a profound pact. Whilst their story evolves with plenty of back references to their schooldays and before, plus we get an occasional narrative purporting to be a letter from a friend extolling the joys and happiness of their new God-loving and mutually supportive community, I found that neither characterisation was any where near developed enough. Moreover, even given that “Doe” was having a torrid time at school, it seemed to me far from likely that either of these women would have elected on quite such a blind solution to their issues, nor to treat those left behind with such inconsiderate disdain. Cinematically, it serves as a travelogue of Istanbul and shows that city and it’s people in a largely good light, barring the odd but infrequent bit of lechery, but it still never delivered a killer blow. It simply didn’t answer the question of why? As a coming of age drama, it is unconvincing and as a stimulant for conversation about religious indoctrination or opportunity, it barely scratches the surface. The performances are fine; the dialogue and the camerawork adequate, but it was all just too superficial and incomplete for me.
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