Babel
Year: 2006
Genre: Drama
Studio: Anonymous Content, Central Films, Zeta Film, MRC
Director: Alejandro González Iñárritu
Cast: Rinko Kikuchi, Adriana Barraza, Brad Pitt, Cate Blanchett, Satoshi Nikaido, Said Tarchani
Crew: Ann Ruark (Producer), Kay Ueda (Line Producer), Jon Kilik (Producer), Gustavo Santaolalla (Original Music Composer), Douglas Crise (Editor), Yoshihito Akatsuka (Set Decoration)
Runtime: 143 minutes
Release: Oct 26, 2006
IMDb: 7.20/10 by 3,827 users
Popularity: 4
Country: France, Mexico, United States of America
Language: العربية, English, Español, Français, 日本語, Pусский
Budget: 25,000,000
Revenue: 135,330,835

two children changes the fate of 4 families from 3 different continents. The events of the film begin with a man named Hassan arriving at the house of Abu Abdullah's friend in the desert of Morocco in order to sell him a rifle he received as a gift from a Japanese person. Abu Abdullah was in dire need of a gun in order to hunt the foxes that were eating his sheep Abu Abdullah has two children, one of whom is called Youssef, and he is very good at shooting a gun. What happened was not taken into account, which is that Youssef and his older brother wanted to conduct an experiment to see if the rifle could be used for long distances, and one of the rifle bullets hit an American tourist by mistake, and America considered it an act of terrorism. This is the summary. I felt that I was spinning in three continents when the director was changing between one shot and the other, so the film would go from one continent to another. Giving the Japanese tourist the gun to Hassan Al-Maghribi changed the fates of the attitudes of people and countries, so America went to consider the shooting incident of the American tourist as a terrorist act, despite The smoothness of events. I felt that the game of fate is like Biango, which is the probability that you will be exposed to it 1 percent, but it may happen to you, as it happened to Cate Blanchett through a gift from a Japanese person.