
4 Reasons Why We're Excited About Lam Shamseya
A Gripping and Mysterious Storyline
Although the full plot hasn't been revealed yet, the trailer hints at a major conflict that shakes the lives of the main characters. There's tension, emotional confrontations, and a sense of urgency that makes us eager to see how the story unfolds. What exactly happened? How will the characters navigate the challenges ahead? The mystery is already drawing us in.
A Strong Cast and Crew Collaboration
One of the biggest reasons for the hype is the reunion of director Karim El Shennawy with Amina Khalil and Mohamed Shahin, following their success in El Harsha El Sab3a. Their previous collaboration delivered a raw and emotional portrayal of modern relationships, and fans are eager to see how they bring the same depth to Lam Shamseya. With a talented ensemble cast and a skilled creative team, the series promises strong performances and powerful storytelling.
A Fusion of Genres
From the trailer, Lam Shamsiya appears to blend different genres, combining elements of drama, suspense, and emotional storytelling. This fusion keeps the series dynamic and engaging, offering moments of intensity, heartfelt emotion, and intrigue all in one. By balancing multiple tones, the show has the potential to appeal to a wide audience and keep viewers hooked throughout Ramadan.
A Unique and Unconventional Ramadan Drama
Since the show's announcement and the buzz around its proposition of a storyline involving pedophilia, audiences have been eager to see how it will tackle such a sensitive and complex theme. With trailers and promotional material revealing little, anticipation and curiosity continue to build. What's clear, however, is that Lam Shamseya is not a typical Ramadan series—it seeks to push boundaries and deliver deeper storytelling than what viewers are accustomed to during the season.
Do you think Lam Shamsiya will be one of Ramadan's most talked-about series?

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


See - Sada Elbalad
5 hours ago
- See - Sada Elbalad
Khaled El Nabawy to Participate in Ramadan 2026 Drama Marathon
Yara Sameh Famed Egyptian actor Khaled El Nabawy is preparing for a new TV series, which he plans to participate in during the Ramadan 2026 drama marathon. The series hails from director Youssr Taher and witnesses El Nabawy's comeback to the drama marathon after opting to skip this season. He made his last participation in the marathon with the 2024 TV adaptation of the 1972 film "Embratoreyet Meem" (Empire M). The 1972 film follows Mona (Faten Hamama), a widow raising her six kids besides her work. She gradually falls in love with businessman Ahmed (Ahmed Mazhar) but doesn't give in to her feelings easily being torn apart between her devotion to her children and her future with Ahmed. The film featured a cast that included Faten Hamama, Ahmed Mazhar, Hesham Selim, Dawlat Abyad, Ali Gawhar, Saif Abo El Naga, Nagyat Kandel, and others. Filmmaker Hussein Kamal directed the pic from a script by Ihsan Abd al-Qudus and Mustafa Samy. In the TV adaptation, it follows Mukhtar, who is left to care for his six children after losing his wife. He must navigate their changing needs and perspectives while also choosing between his children's lives and the person to whom his heart is attached. The drama also stars Hala Shiha, Nour El-Nabawy, Nashwa Moustafa, Mahmoud Hafez, Mohamed Mahmoud Abdulaziz, Rasha Mahdi, Eman Al Sayyed, Hagar ElSarrag, and more. The reimagining, consisting of 30 episodes, was directed by Mohamed Salama and written by Mohamed Suleiman Abdel Malek. Aroma Studios is the studio behind the series. read more New Tourism Route To Launch in Old Cairo Ahmed El Sakka-Led Play 'Sayidati Al Jamila' to Be Staged in KSA on Dec. 6 Mandy Moore Joins Season 2 of "Dr. Death" Anthology Series Don't Miss These Movies at 44th Cairo Int'l Film Festival Today Amr Diab to Headline KSA's MDLBEAST Soundstorm 2022 Festival Arts & Culture Mai Omar Stuns in Latest Instagram Photos Arts & Culture "The Flash" to End with Season 9 Arts & Culture Ministry of Culture Organizes four day Children's Film Festival Arts & Culture Canadian PM wishes Muslims Eid-al-Adha News Israeli-Linked Hadassah Clinic in Moscow Treats Wounded Iranian IRGC Fighters Arts & Culture "Jurassic World Rebirth" Gets Streaming Date News China Launches Largest Ever Aircraft Carrier News Ayat Khaddoura's Final Video Captures Bombardment of Beit Lahia Videos & Features Tragedy Overshadows MC Alger Championship Celebration: One Fan Dead, 11 Injured After Stadium Fall Business Egyptian Pound Undervalued by 30%, Says Goldman Sachs Lifestyle Get to Know 2025 Eid Al Adha Prayer Times in Egypt Arts & Culture South Korean Actress Kang Seo-ha Dies at 31 after Cancer Battle Arts & Culture Lebanese Media: Fayrouz Collapses after Death of Ziad Rahbani Sports Get to Know 2025 WWE Evolution Results


CairoScene
22-07-2025
- CairoScene
In 'Beneath the Desert Sky' House of Vilrique Paints Qatar in Filipino
In 'Beneath the Desert Sky' House of Vilrique Paints Qatar in Filipino There is something arresting about a garment that knows where it comes from. In Beneath the Desert Sky, designer Vilrick Cruz returns to familiar terrain—both literal and emotional—with a collection that draws from the arid stillness of the Middle East and the quiet pulse of memory. Raised in Qatar and rooted in the Philippines, Cruz belongs to a generation of designers whose work resists a singular origin. His pieces speak of movement—across cultures, across inner worlds—crafted with a discipline that feels both intuitive and studied. 'I've always felt like a nomad,' he says. 'Most of my upbringing was in Qatar, a country that's very conservative and often limiting for someone like me who wants to express and explore freely. The Philippines, on the other hand, is where I touched my roots—loud, chaotic, soulful. That contrast taught me how to create with care, but also with nerve.' His earlier work was sculptural, almost architectural in its articulation. Structured lines. Artisanal finishes. Fabric manipulated into quiet dramas of form and shadow. But in Beneath the Desert Sky, something loosens. The silhouettes open. There is more air, more drape. The collection was designed during a return to Doha, where Cruz found himself reorienting—creatively, culturally, personally. 'It had been years since I came back,' he reflects. 'I realised how much the place had changed—and how much I had, too.' Where his previous collections leaned towards neutral palettes and bold structures, Beneath the Desert Sky introduces jewel tones, silk satins, and chiffons that move with the wind. 'This was my first time using vibrant colour,' Cruz explains. 'Since it was for Ramadan, I wanted the pieces to reflect celebration. It made sense, aesthetically and emotionally. There's something powerful about seeing rich colour against a desert backdrop. That contrast stayed with me.' Though inspired by the environment, the collection is not about mimicry. It is a response to feeling—how wind presses against skin, how drape can become gesture, how fabric can carry memory. Every piece is built to move, yet holds its shape. There is no fuss. Nothing clings. Instead, garments fall in ways that allow the wearer to be present without effort. Cruz is deeply attuned to the emotional life of materials. 'For this collection, I used silk satin and chiffon—fabrics that breathe, that feel luxurious without screaming. I wanted it to be mindful, especially because this was my first time designing again in the Middle East. There's a sensitivity to the region, a conservativity I had to respect. But that doesn't mean you compromise intention.' The result is a collection that reads like a study in poise. Elemental draping. Many pieces seem to suggest wind without replicating it, or recall sand dunes without literal translation. 'I was thinking of women I used to see in the desert when I was younger. They were regal. That image stayed with me. I wanted the collection to echo that, but through lightness and presence.' Cruz calls this approach demi-couture—a mode of design that balances craftsmanship with wearability. It's couture in detail, but not in preciousness. 'In the Middle East, there's a strong culture of couture and abayas, but I think there's a hunger for something quieter, more personal. People want boldness—but grounded in something classic. That's the space I try to design from.' His voice—thoughtful, measured—mirrors his work. There's no grandstanding, no obsession with shock or novelty. Instead, there is care. There is rhythm. He describes fashion as a form of storytelling. 'Each collection begins with something I need to say. I'm not interested in speed. I think fashion needs to slow down. Let people listen to fabric again.' Beneath the Desert Sky was photographed in a remote desert resort, a location chosen after Cruz's original idea—a shoot inside a historic Qatari palace—was blocked by strict preservation laws. But the new site, though improvised, offered what the designer wanted: stillness, scale, and a cinematic solitude. 'When we got there, it felt like a scene out of Mad Max: Fury Road, but quieter, more poetic. That silence gave the collection space to breathe.' The collection also marks a turning point. It is his third overall, but the first rooted in the Middle East. 'There were moments when I nearly gave up,' he admits. 'Moving to Doha felt like things were paused. The creative silence was loud. But I allowed myself to sit with it. I didn't force my way back. I waited until I had something true to say.' That patience shows. Beneath the Desert Sky carries the calm assurance of a designer who doesn't need to shout to be heard. The collection is offering presence. When asked how he hopes the collection will be remembered fifty years from now, Cruz doesn't hesitate. 'I hope it still feels timeless. I hope people see the care in it. The refinement. That it wasn't made to chase a trend. Just something that meant something. And still does.'


See - Sada Elbalad
21-07-2025
- See - Sada Elbalad
Ahmed Elawady's Ramadan 2026 Series Gets Title
Yara Sameh Egyptian actor Ahmed Elawady's upcoming TV series for the Ramadan 2026 drama marathon has received a title. It is set to be filmed under the title, "Ali Clay," and hails from director Mohamed Abdel Salam and scriptwriter Mahmoud Hamdan. Elawady participated last Ramadan with ' Fahd El Batal '. The cast also includes Aida Riyad, Lucy, Safaa El-Toukhi, Ahmed Abdelaziz, Haggag Abdulazim, Mahmoud El Bezzawy, Myrna Noureldin, Essam Elsaka, Sarah Salama, Caroline Azmy, and more. It is scripted by Mahmoud Hamdan, directed by Mohamed Abdel Salam, and produced by Synergy. "Fahd El Batal" marked Elawady and Hamdan's second collaboration after working on the 2023 TV series 'Haq Arab," which achieved great success during its premiere in the holy month of Ramadan. It also witnessed the third collaboration between Noureldin and Elawady's after Season 4 of "Hekayat Banat S4" (2020) and the TV series "Al Hosan Al Aswad Building" (2017). read more New Tourism Route To Launch in Old Cairo Ahmed El Sakka-Led Play 'Sayidati Al Jamila' to Be Staged in KSA on Dec. 6 Mandy Moore Joins Season 2 of "Dr. Death" Anthology Series Don't Miss These Movies at 44th Cairo Int'l Film Festival Today Amr Diab to Headline KSA's MDLBEAST Soundstorm 2022 Festival Arts & Culture Mai Omar Stuns in Latest Instagram Photos Arts & Culture "The Flash" to End with Season 9 Arts & Culture Ministry of Culture Organizes four day Children's Film Festival Arts & Culture Canadian PM wishes Muslims Eid-al-Adha News Israeli-Linked Hadassah Clinic in Moscow Treats Wounded Iranian IRGC Fighters Arts & Culture "Jurassic World Rebirth" Gets Streaming Date News China Launches Largest Ever Aircraft Carrier Videos & Features Tragedy Overshadows MC Alger Championship Celebration: One Fan Dead, 11 Injured After Stadium Fall Lifestyle Get to Know 2025 Eid Al Adha Prayer Times in Egypt Arts & Culture South Korean Actress Kang Seo-ha Dies at 31 after Cancer Battle News "Tensions Escalate: Iran Probes Allegations of Indian Tech Collaboration with Israeli Intelligence" Sports Get to Know 2025 WWE Evolution Results Business Egyptian Pound Undervalued by 30%, Says Goldman Sachs News Flights suspended at Port Sudan Airport after Drone Attacks