Over four 45-minute episodes, the Saudi Netflix mini-series Crashing Eid by Saudi writer Nora Aboushousha serves up a delightful family entertainment experience.
If follows Razan (Summer Shesha), a divorcee living in London with her teenage daughter Lamar (Bateel Qamlo), following an unsuccessful marriage to her cousin.
In the city she now calls home, she crosses paths with a young British-Pakistani man called Sameer (Hamza Haq). They hit it off and decide to tie the knot.
When Razan returns with her daughter to Jeddah to celebrate Eid with her family, Sameer decides to join them at her family’s home without prior notice.
Scrambling to find excuses, an embarrassed Razan claims Sameer is a colleague who is in Saudi Arabia to perform Umrah.
Meanwhile, the only lie her daughter can think of on the spot to cover the identity of the Eid crasher is that he is a diver exploring the Red Sea. Cue confusion and comedy.
Dividing opinions
Upon its release, the series caused controversy because it shed light on thus-far unexplored topics in Saudi society. Ever since, it has divided opinions.
While some rejected it as offensive to Saudi societal values, others welcomed its bold but light-hearted nature. Stop seeing it as a documentary, they said. See it as a work of entertainment.
Indeed, the series dips its toes into some dangerous waters but doesn’t fully immerse itself by taking sides or positions on any issue or theme. The major seam running through the four episodes is women’s independence.