The Couch Critic Logo
The Couch CriticCouch Critic
TrendingMoviesTV ShowsListsReviewsWhat to Watch
LogoThe Couch Critic

Menu

TrendingMoviesTV ShowsListsReviewsWhat to Watch

© 2026 The Couch Critic

The Couch Critic Logo

The Couch Critic

Your go-to destination for honest movie and TV show reviews from a passionate community of critics. Join the conversation today.

X

Explore

  • Trending
  • Movies
  • TV Shows
  • Reviews
  • Lists
  • Games
  • About Us

Categories

  • Popular Movies
  • Trending Now
  • Upcoming
  • Airing Today
  • Movie Genres
  • TV Genres

Community

  • Guides
  • What to Watch

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Cookie Policy
  • RSS Feed
© 2026 The Couch Critic.•Built by Hayden Thorn
Cookie Settings
The Movie Database

This application uses TMDB and the TMDB APIs but is not endorsed, certified, or otherwise approved by TMDB.

Home/People/Bilal Safadi
Bilal Safadi profile photo
Born
Nov 6, 1997
Age 28
Place of Birth
Damascus, Syria
Known For
Writing
Gender
Male

Career Highlights

0
Movies
0
TV Shows
1
Directed

Bilal Safadi

Writing

Biography
Bilal Safadi (1997) is a filmmaker from Majdal Shams in the occupied Golan Heights, born in Damascus to a Syrian mother from Sweida and a father from the occupied Golan Heights. He graduated from the Film & Television Department at Tel Aviv University and completed a professional photography diploma at the Technion. His work draws on personal memory and lived experience through restrained narratives and a visually driven cinematic language. Drawn to emotional tension and quiet intensity, he creates films where atmosphere, silence, and gesture carry as much weight as plot, treating cinema as a space where emotion can exist without excess. For over fifteen years, Safadi has worked across directing, cinematography, editing, art direction, and sound, contributing to numerous student films and documentary projects, including works later broadcast on Al Jazeera. He also has a background in acting and theatre, having performed in acclaimed stage productions across Israeli and Palestinian cities. His debut short film, 67 Hours, and graduation project at Tel Aviv University, based on the real story of his mother’s attempt to cross into Syria for her father’s funeral, explores themes of borders, grief, and suspended belonging. The film was presented at the Short Film Corner of the Cannes Film Festival. He was recently selected to participate in the T-Port Talent Bridge program at the Cannes Film Festival, where he began developing his first feature film project.

No movies found