"Ahwak" sets out to navigate the complexities of modern romance but ends up swerving into a ditch of superficiality. The film's attempts at humor occasionally hit the mark, but they're overshadowed by its obsession with showcasing a life of excess-characters draped in revealing outfits, lounging in palatial homes with cars that cost more than a small country's GDP. It's like watching a Middle Eastern version of MTV Cribs gone wrong.
Tamer Hosny and Ghada Adel lead the cast through a series of first-world dilemmas that are as predictable as they are extravagant. The storyline bounces between cringeworthy melodrama and moments where you're left wondering if they accidentally stumbled into a soap opera set. The film's insistence on showcasing hedonistic pursuits and over-the-top party scenes further drowns any hopes of finding meaningful emotional depth.
Relationships in "Ahwak" are about as nuanced as a sledgehammer. Whether it's a man gallivanting off with a divorced woman to party all night, or characters having epiphanies in between shots of tequila, it's hard to take any of it seriously. Instead of delving into genuine introspection, the narrative opts for spectacle, leaving viewers to ponder if they stumbled into a bizarro version of Tinder: The Movie.
In conclusion, "Ahwak" misses the mark, delivering a glossy but ultimately shallow take on Arab cinema. Its fixation on surface-level glam and lack of narrative substance make it less a meaningful exploration of relationships and more a cautionary tale of what happens when melodrama meets a limitless wardrobe budget.