A Sinner in Mecca is a 2015 documentary film from director Parvez Sharma (A Jihad for Love). The film chronicles Sharma's Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca, Saudi Arabia as an openly gay Muslim. The film premiered at the 2015 Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival to critical acclaim as well as negative controversies. The film opened in theaters in the US on September 4, 2015, and is a New York Times Critics' Pick.
A Sinner in Mecca enters a world that has been forbidden to non-Muslims for 14 centuries. Parvez Sharma documents his journey on an iPhone and two smuggled tiny cameras. On the streets of Mecca he joins 4 million other Muslim pilgrims from different traditions of Islam, fulfilling a lifelong calling for Hajj.
The film examines parts of the ideology that governs todayâÂÂs Islamic extremism and what it has in common with Saudi ArabiaâÂÂs Wahabi Islam. In the movie the filmmaker, an openly gay Muslim man, tries to find his own place within an Islam he has always known, an Islam that he believes bears no resemblance to Wahabi Islam.
In the movie the filmmaker sees himself as a longing Muslim, labeled an infidel, wondering if he can finally secure his place within this religion that condemns him.
A Sinner in Mecca is co-produced with Arte and ZDF in Europe.
The film is set in Saudi Arabia, India, and the United States.
A Sinner in Mecca<nowiki/>'s European premiere was at the UK's Sheffield Doc/Fest where it was nominated for a Grand Jury Award. Additional security was provided. The film won the Grand Jury Award for Best Documentary at Outfest in Los Angeles.
A Sinner in Mecca premiered at the 2015 Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Festival and had a limited US theatrical release beginning on September 4, 2015. The film played at several international festivals including CPH Dox in November 2015 and IDFA in November 2015. It won the Best Documentary Award at Image+Nation in Montreal in December, 2015. The film was among those in consideration for an Academy Award on October 23, 2015.
The world premiere at Hot Docs required added security in response to online hate mail and death threats against the director.
The online abuse and death threats around the film continued through its theatrical release and its debut on iTunes, Netflix and television channels.
The film was initially slated to be screened at the 26th Singapore International Film Festival. Due to the country's conservative policies, permission to screen the film was withheld at the last minute.
The New York Times named the movie a Critics' Pick and said âÂÂMr. Sharma has created a swirling, fascinating travelogue and a stirring celebration of devotion. We emerge from his film more enlightened.â Critic Alan Scherstuhl in The Village Voice said âÂÂNext time you hear politicians or right-wing broadcasters asking why 'moderate' Muslims don't denounce terrorism, show them this movie.â In a story on the film, The Washington Post called the film âÂÂComplex" and "Revelatory". In a feature about the film, Yahoo News called the film âÂÂA Rebuke of Saudi ArabiaâÂÂ.
The film received universal acclaim upon its 2015 Hot Docs premiere. The Hollywood Reporter called it âÂÂWrenching... gritty... surreal and transcendent; Visceral and Abstract... a true act of courage and hope.â The Guardian wrote, âÂÂWith poetic simplicity... a delicately personal story and a call to action.â OUT Magazine described it as âÂÂBrave... An unprecedented exploration of Islam.â Indiewire wrote, âÂÂPowerful, Illuminating ... a remarkable examination of contemporary Islam.â BBC Persian called it âÂÂShocking and CourageousâÂÂ. Screen Daily referred to the film as âÂÂâÂÂUnprecedented... Surreal.â The Toronto Star called it âÂÂA deeply personal film about faith and forgiveness.â Scroll.in said, âÂÂDeeply personal ... High Drama ... A protest against Saudi ArabiaâÂÂ. Anne Thompson in Thompson on Hollywood wrote, âÂÂThe film combines the political, the personal and the spiritual in a remarkable wayâÂÂ. It has a score of 76% on Metacritic and a score of 85% on Rotten Tomatoes.
In a feature on the film, The Daily News said it was âÂÂ(A) death defying religious journey.â In its review of the film, The Daily News said âÂÂCompelling... takes its audience where no film has gone beforeâÂÂ
Christianity Today says the film is âÂÂCritical but not mockingâÂÂ.
Out magazine published an op-ed about Parvez Sharma's Hajj.
Jahan News, an Iranian news agency, denounced the filmmaker for promoting âÂÂthe disgusting act of homosexualityâ and labeled the film "an attack on Islam."
Grand Jury Award for Best Documentary at Outfest in Los Angeles.
Won a RapidLion for Best Documentary Feature, 2016
Movies that Matter, The Hague, 2016
Best Documentary, Image+Nation Film Festival, Montreal 2016
Best Documentary, Reeling Film Festival