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Terrorism and Kebab 1992

Ahmed travels to the Tahrir compound to obtain the paperwork needed to transfer his son to a new school. He soon runs into bureaucratic red tape, confronting corrupt officials, and an unexpected turn forces him to smuggle a weapon and seize hostages inside a government building, inadvertently becoming labeled a terrorist.

Ahmed travels to the Tahrir compound to obtain the paperwork needed to transfer his son to a new school. He soon runs into bureaucratic red tape, confronting corrupt officials, and an unexpected turn forces him to smuggle a weapon and seize hostages inside a government building, inadvertently becoming labeled a terrorist.

Does Terrorism and Kebab have end credit scenes?

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Terrorism and Kebab does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.

Full Plot Summary and Ending Explained for Terrorism and Kebab

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Read the complete plot summary of Terrorism and Kebab, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.


Inside Cairo’s colossal Mogamma, a fortress of bureaucracy, the film unfolds as a tense, satire-tinged tragedy about ordinary people pressed to the breaking point. At the center is Ahmed Fath El-Bab, who one day waits in a never-ending queue to request a school transfer for his children, only to find the system crawling at a snail’s pace. The building’s iconic spiral staircases and endless corridors become a living maze where citizens shuffle through the day, hoping for a sign of progress while clerks juggle forms, rules, and delays.

A frayed moment erupts when a government worker, masking his inefficiency with constant prayer, becomes the focal point of Ahmed’s mounting frustration. A scuffle breaks out, and in the ensuing confusion Ahmed ends up with a rifle borrowed from a guard. Shots ring out and a mass evacuation follows, thrusting the Mogamma into chaos. In the turmoil, Ahmed inadvertently becomes the figurehead of a hostage situation, a turn of events that no one anticipated. He is soon joined by two unlikely companions: Shalabi, a shoe shiner who moves through life with a stubborn grit, and Hind, a woman who has endured confinement and danger, adding a volatile human dimension to the scene.

The police respond with a risky, almost improvised plan: they send a child armed with a Walkie-Talkie to maintain a line of communication with the hostage takers. Inside the building, Ahmed and his small cadre press for leverage, declaring that they will blow up the structure using its stock of gas cylinders if their needs are not met. Yet the menacing threat is complicated by their own lack of clear demands, a point that casts doubt over the entire operation and raises questions about who is really directing the crisis.

In a moment of stark irony, Ahmed voices a seemingly simple, almost absurd demand: kebab for all the hostages—an accessible, everyday pleasure in a country where meat can be scarce and expensive. The line between desperation and theater becomes increasingly blurred as the police struggle to stall, infiltrate, and negotiate, while the hostages’ personal histories begin to surface in fragments. The narrative paints a portrait of people who feel wronged by a sprawling system, revealing grievances that stretch beyond the immediate siege.

As night settles, the authorities attempt to storm the building. A dramatic moment unfolds when a ladder from a fire truck is thwarted by Ahmed, who uses the building’s fire hose as a makeshift barrier. Hind and Shalabi escalate the danger by firing warning shots on the ground floor and dropping a gas cylinder, triggering a large, destabilizing explosion. Yet, conspicuously, no troops are harmed, and the assault loses momentum as the siege continues to stretch the limits of reason on both sides.

Pressure for a resolution mounts, and Ahmed undergoes a quiet, sobering realization: his actual desire is not material concessions but the chance to live a normal life with his children. He invites the hostages to articulate their own grievances, and in their testimonies they collectively call for a change at the highest level—the cabinet to resign. The government’s response is swift and dismissive: ministers frame the event as a threat, push a narrative that Ahmed is deranged, and instruct news outlets to report that a deal has been reached while pledging to use force to retake the building.

In the climactic closing act, Ahmed orders the hostages to leave, planning to stay behind to face the coming assault. The crowd, however, refuses to abandon him and insists he walk free with them. As the military closes in, Ahmed slips away among the departing group, and when the commandos breach the space, they discover the building deserted—the former hostage-takers and the crowd have vanished into the city, leaving a stark silence in the wake of the chaotic, defining moment.

This film is a pointed, human-centered examination of power, bureaucracy, and the daily indignities that spark extraordinary acts. It blends dark humor with piercing social commentary, inviting the audience to question who truly holds the power in a system designed to move slowly and protect itself, while never losing sight of the individual lives caught in the machinery.

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Terrorism and Kebab Themes and Keywords

Discover the central themes, ideas, and keywords that define the movie’s story, tone, and message. Analyze the film’s deeper meanings, genre influences, and recurring concepts.


bureaucracyterrorismhostagegas cylindergas explosionlittle boyradicalismdemands5 star servicesuicide notecruel bossbusold manhusband wife relationshiprestroommiddle classworking classshoeshinesecurity forcesprayingminister of interiorkebabinjusticefamily relationshipscrowded buscounter terrorismclass distinctionchildrenprostitutionministry of interiorlower classjusticecorruption

Terrorism and Kebab Other Names and Titles

Explore the various alternative titles, translations, and other names used for Terrorism and Kebab across different regions and languages. Understand how the film is marketed and recognized worldwide.


Terrorism & Bar.B.Que Terrorism & BBQ Al-Irhab wal Kabab الإرهاب والكباب Al Irhab Wa Al Kabab الإرهاب وةالكباب Al-irhab wal kabab الإرهاب والكباب‎‎ irheb we kabeb

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