The story takes place three years after the events of the first film, as the four brothers tried their best to keep away from the life of crime. But one event takes place that changes all that and makes them enter new worlds and puts them face to face with dangerous criminals.
In her directorial debut, Mary Jirmanus Saba deals with a forgotten revolution, saving from oblivion bloodily suppressed strikes at Lebanese tobacco and chocolate factories. These events from the 1970s, which held the promise of a popular revolution and, with it, of women's emancipation were erased from collective memory by the country's civil wars. Rich in archival footage from Lebanon's militant cinema tradition, the film reconstructs the spirit of that revolt, asking of the past how we might transform the present.
Two friends both struggling with their careers dress up as police officers for a costume party. They soon realize that civilians and even cops think they are the real deal. Seeing this as an opportunity for female attention and perks, the duo begin a spree of crazy adventures. The duo's fun come to a grinding halt, once confronted by dangerous mobsters. They are forced to rely on themselves against deadly criminal and corrupt cops.
A group of clowns who set off for the island of Lesbos to deliver laughter to refugees.
The concept of this documentary film was born from the director Salim Saab's desire to break down stereotypes about Arab women. The women, principally from Lebanon but also Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Tunisia, speak for themselves, about themselves - of their art, their daily lives and their perception of feminism.