Les cinq saisons
Three sisters face their father's sudden death. Khadija, the stoic eldest; Hind, the angry rebel; and Hanan, the blind youngest. Each mourning in her own way as winter grief turns to spring's surprise…

Les cinq saisons
Three sisters face their father's sudden death. Khadija, the stoic eldest; Hind, the angry rebel; and Hanan, the blind youngest. Each mourning in her own way as winter grief turns to spring's surprises. In the winter, the father of three girls dies, and they refuse to accept the idea of his death. Then, in the spring, the three girls start having emotional experiences, but they don't succeed in those relationships. Later, the fall arrives to deliver them a state of imbalance, and eventually the summer comes to give them a new opportunity to make love stories work. —elcinema.com A tale of three sisters who face the catastrophe of their father's sudden death. Khadija, the eldest, who had devoted her entire life to her father and her two sisters, takes charge with resilience, refusing to allow herself the relief of tears. Hind, the middle sister, seeks refuge in sleep and anger, proclaiming her rebellion against the cruelty of fate that has stolen her father. She clashes with Khadija in a struggle where each tries to impose her will on the other, and each mourns their father's loss in her own way. Amid this conflict lies the youngest sister, Hanan, silent yet carrying within her a muted revolt against her violin. She refuses to play after her father's death. Blind, Hanan had always lived under the shadow of darkness, but now she plunges into an even deeper gloom after losing the father through whose eyes she had seen life, through whom she had played, through whom she had lived. Winter's rain and chill arrive, carrying the weight of tragedy and grief for their father's passing-only to give way to spring, with its colors and its unforeseen surprises. —2m

Les cinq saisons
Drama
Film Details
Three sisters face their father's sudden death. Khadija, the stoic eldest; Hind, the angry rebel; and Hanan, the blind youngest. Each mourning in her own way as winter grief turns to spring's surprises.
In the winter, the father of three girls dies, and they refuse to accept the idea of his death. Then, in the spring, the three girls start having emotional experiences, but they don't succeed in those relationships. Later, the fall arrives to deliver them a state of imbalance, and eventually the summer comes to give them a new opportunity to make love stories work.
—elcinema.com A tale of three sisters who face the catastrophe of their father's sudden death. Khadija, the eldest, who had devoted her entire life to her father and her two sisters, takes charge with resilience, refusing to allow herself the relief of tears. Hind, the middle sister, seeks refuge in sleep and anger, proclaiming her rebellion against the cruelty of fate that has stolen her father.
She clashes with Khadija in a struggle where each tries to impose her will on the other, and each mourns their father's loss in her own way. Amid this conflict lies the youngest sister, Hanan, silent yet carrying within her a muted revolt against her violin. She refuses to play after her father's death.
Blind, Hanan had always lived under the shadow of darkness, but now she plunges into an even deeper gloom after losing the father through whose eyes she had seen life, through whom she had played, through whom she had lived. Winter's rain and chill arrive, carrying the weight of tragedy and grief for their father's passing-only to give way to spring, with its colors and its unforeseen surprises. —2m.