
Fadila Benmoussa
Acting
Biography
Fadila Benmoussa is a Moroccan actress, born in Marrakesh in 1959. She started with the amateur theater in 1977, and moved to professionalism in 1981. Ever since that time she has become a familiar face to Moroccan viewers, especially with her "Marrakesh accent" that distinguishes her. She spent more than seven years with the Marrakech El-Wafa Ensemble, where she participated in several plays. Among her works are: The Clandestine (2010), Reserved Travel (2018) and Comfort and Tourism (2010).
Born: May 16, 1959
Place of Birth: Marrakech, Morocco
Known For

Moul Lmlih
Larbi sells sandwiches in his mobile cart and wants to develop himself, while his younger brother Abbas is unemployed. Their lives change when Abbas discovers a secret cooking recipe that will be the origin of their fortune, but the cost of success will come at the expense of their relationship.

Abdou With The Almohades
Abdou is tricked into an experiment by American researchers and is suddenly propelled into a distant civilization, that of the Almohad dynasty who ruled the great Maghreb and Muslim Spain from 1147 to 1269 during the reign of Yaqub Al Mansour.

الحماله
Salah is a young delinquent who finds himself forced by a band of criminals who kidnapped his mother to carry out a dangerous transaction and transport a shipment of drugs from Marrakech to Tangier.

La Main de Fadma
Fadma is an active Moroccan woman, a mother who, after the death of her husband, raised her two children alone: Ahmed is her pride and joy, having succeeded in France, and Karim is the eccentric artist who still lives with her. Sensing danger around her son Ahmed, she decides to visit him in France. And it's here that she discovers the problem of her granddaughter Julie-Aïcha, a teenager in search of her identity. Fadma and Julie-Aïcha discover a new shared passion.

The Bitter Orange
Souadia's monotonous life changes after an encounter with a police officer (Amin) next to an orange tree

Hideous Kinky
In 1972, disenchanted about the dreary conventions of English life, 25-year-old Julia heads for Morocco with her daughters, six-year-old Lucy and precocious eight-year-old Bea.

Lahnech
Farid lives with his mother in the medina. Still a bachelor, he draws a modest income by extorting vendors and small shop-owners by impersonating a policeman. Every day, he dons the uniform, a fake gun and handcuffs, puts on a show, and does the rounds – blissfully unaware that the real police force has him under surveillance, suspecting he might be a member of the criminal underground. Officer Bouchra is sent in, her mission to get close to him and gather information first-hand. Driss Mrini’s uproarious comedy had a successful run at the box office, and showcases the talent of a host of Moroccan film stars..

Al Farrouj
Michel, a French national, lives in the Riad adjoining the house of Boujemâa and turns it into a guest house. The noise resulting from the tourist activities and songs of the rooster poisons the relations between the two neighbors.

The Brothers
"Al Ikhwan" is a social comedy that tells the story of 3 friends (Zreka, Charo, and Abdelssadek), from a slum in Casablanca, who consider themselves brothers. Each of them has their story, their concerns, their problems, but they all share the same thing: failure in their lives marked by poverty, unemployment and marginalization... By seeking to create a buzz at through a video shot by the 3 young people, they were polarized and manipulated because of their naivety and carelessness and thus found themselves pursued by a search warrant against them throughout the national territory. .

Comfort and Tourism
A man convinces his brother-in-law to marry a foreign womanl to facilitate his obtainment of foreign nationality and improve their living conditions, but an unpleasant surprise awaits the brothers as the girl's scheme gradually unfolds.
Filmography
as Hajja
as The mother
as Zineb
as Mother
as Latifa mother's
as Hotel Lady