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In a land where borders can move faster than people, six Palestinian comedians set out to do something that feels almost impossible: make each other laugh.
From Jenin to Haifa, Ramallah to Hebron, they carry their jokes through checkpoints, fractured roads, family expectations, and the quiet exhaustion of living under constant scrutiny. Their punchlines are sharp, sarcastic, and often absurd, but beneath them sits something heavier: grief, longing, survival, and the stubborn refusal to let the world reduce them to tragedy.
What emerges is not simply a film about stand-up comedy, but a portrait of resistance through wit. Here, humor becomes a passport, a shield, a weapon, a love language. These performers turn tiny stages into acts of defiance, transforming humiliation into satire and fear into something briefly communal. The film moves with the intimacy of a road movie and the ache of a nation carrying itself in fragments, blending backstage nerves, raw conversations, and electric performances into something unexpectedly tender.
There is something deeply moving about watching people fight for the right to be funny. The laughter in this film does not erase pain; it sits beside it. It interrupts it. It survives it. In a place where the world often arrives with cameras only for violence, these comedians insist on being seen in full: flirtatious, messy, ambitious, exhausted, ridiculous, alive. The result is a film that feels both urgent and strangely romantic — a reminder that even under occupation, people still fall in love, tease their friends, dream of bigger stages, and laugh so hard they forget, if only for a moment, where they are.
Funny, heartbreaking, and unexpectedly beautiful, Palestine Comedy Club captures the sound of a people refusing to disappear. - Lucy Hanna, SF DocFest
- Year2026
- Runtime96 minutes
- LanguageArabic, English
- CountryUnited Kingdom
- DirectorAlaa AliAbdallah
- ProducerCharlotte Knowles
- CastAlaa Shehada, Hanna Shammas, Diana Swity
- EditorLibby Knowles
- MusicKhalil Al-Batran
In a land where borders can move faster than people, six Palestinian comedians set out to do something that feels almost impossible: make each other laugh.
From Jenin to Haifa, Ramallah to Hebron, they carry their jokes through checkpoints, fractured roads, family expectations, and the quiet exhaustion of living under constant scrutiny. Their punchlines are sharp, sarcastic, and often absurd, but beneath them sits something heavier: grief, longing, survival, and the stubborn refusal to let the world reduce them to tragedy.
What emerges is not simply a film about stand-up comedy, but a portrait of resistance through wit. Here, humor becomes a passport, a shield, a weapon, a love language. These performers turn tiny stages into acts of defiance, transforming humiliation into satire and fear into something briefly communal. The film moves with the intimacy of a road movie and the ache of a nation carrying itself in fragments, blending backstage nerves, raw conversations, and electric performances into something unexpectedly tender.
There is something deeply moving about watching people fight for the right to be funny. The laughter in this film does not erase pain; it sits beside it. It interrupts it. It survives it. In a place where the world often arrives with cameras only for violence, these comedians insist on being seen in full: flirtatious, messy, ambitious, exhausted, ridiculous, alive. The result is a film that feels both urgent and strangely romantic — a reminder that even under occupation, people still fall in love, tease their friends, dream of bigger stages, and laugh so hard they forget, if only for a moment, where they are.
Funny, heartbreaking, and unexpectedly beautiful, Palestine Comedy Club captures the sound of a people refusing to disappear. - Lucy Hanna, SF DocFest
- Year2026
- Runtime96 minutes
- LanguageArabic, English
- CountryUnited Kingdom
- DirectorAlaa AliAbdallah
- ProducerCharlotte Knowles
- CastAlaa Shehada, Hanna Shammas, Diana Swity
- EditorLibby Knowles
- MusicKhalil Al-Batran