
After studying at Victoria College, Alexandria, the late Abdel Salam started his career in cinema as an assistant director to Salah Abou Seif. He later became a set and costume designer for renowned Egyptian filmmakers including Youssef Chahine. In 1964, he worked on the set of Cleopatra with Joseph Mankiewicz and designed costumes for Renzo Rossellini’s Fight for Survival in 1967. In 1969, he directed The Mummy—The Night of Counting the Years. Despite dedicating 12 years to Akhenaton, the project failed due to lack of funds, after which Salam focused on short films and documentaries. He taught at the Egyptian Film Institute and headed the Experimental Film Department before his death in 1986.
Based on the discovery of royal mummies in Dayr al-Bahri in 1881, The Mummy—The Night of Counting the Years follows Abdul Kamal as he conducts an investigation into the theft of antiquities in Thebes. After Salim, a tribal leader and tomb raider, passes away, his sons inherit the secret of a hidden tomb. Faced with a moral crisis, they must choose between continuing the looting to support their tribe or exposing the truth and losing their community.
Director Shadi Abdel Salam
Producer Egyptian General Cinema Organization
Screenwriter Shadi Abdel Salam
Cinematographer Abdel Aziz Fahmi
Editor Kamal Abou El Ella
Music Mario Nascimbene
Production Company Egyptian General Cinema Organization