• Latest
  • Trending
The Fakenapping Review

The Fakenapping Review: When Patricide Becomes the Only Business Plan

Surviving Earth Review

Surviving Earth Review: NBC’s Prehistoric Docuseries Turns Extinction Into Absorbing Television

A Mosquito in the Ear Review

A Mosquito in the Ear Review: An Intimate Family Drama With a Sharp Emotional Sting

Tavern Talk Stories: Dreamwalker Review

Tavern Talk Stories: Dreamwalker Review: Gentle Magic, Warm Characters, and Slow-Burn Choice

My Family Season 2 Review

My Family Season 2 Review: Netflix’s Italian Dramedy Finds Beauty in Broken Promises

The Polygamist Review

The Polygamist Review: Betrayal Burns Bright in Netflix’s 22-Episode Drama

Proud Review

Proud Review: Ignacy Liss Shines in HBO Max’s Striking New Series

This Tempting Madness Review

This Tempting Madness Review: Simone Ashley Anchors a Stylish Thriller of Memory and Marriage

Unrailed 2: Back on Track Review

Unrailed 2: Back on Track Review: Railway Panic Has Never Been This Fun

Find Your Friends Review

Find Your Friends Review: A Sun-Bleached Thriller Lost in Its Own Haze

Maternal Instinct Review

Maternal Instinct Review: Jessica Dimmock Turns a Brutal Case Into a Controlled Documentary

Viral Hit Review

Viral Hit Review: School Violence, Viral Fame, and One Very Strange Mentor

The Evil Lawyer Review

The Evil Lawyer Review: Netflix’s Thai Thriller Puts Ethics on Trial

  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Sunday, June 14, 2026
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Netflix and Paramount Warner

    DOJ Clears Paramount’s $111 Billion Warner Bros. Deal With No Strings Attached

    Ronnie Schell

    Ronnie Schell, Last Surviving Star of ‘Gomer Pyle: U.S.M.C.,’ Dies at 94

    The Batman Part II

    Matt Reeves Calls Action on ‘The Batman: Part II’ in London

    Remove term: Maternal Instinct Maternal Instinct

    Netflix’s ‘Maternal Instinct’ Documents the Texas Fetal Abduction Case That Put Taylor Parker on Death Row

    Taylor Swift: The Official Release Party of a Showgirl Review

    Steven Spielberg Compares Taylor Swift to Lennon and McCartney at Songwriters Hall of Fame

    The Blair Witch Project

    Blair Witch Star Rei Hance Opts Out of Reboot Over AI Identity and Rights Concerns

    Jesse Eisenberg

    Jesse Eisenberg Refused to Return as Zuckerberg for Sorkin’s Sequel: ‘He Has His Problems With the Guy’

    Stop! That! Train!

    RuPaul’s Drag Race Arrives in Theaters With Stop! That! Train!, a Camp Disaster Spoof 10 Years in the Making

    Jack Innanen

    Jack Innanen Confirms He Turned Down a Starring Role in Heated Rivalry Season 2

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Surviving Earth Review

    Surviving Earth Review: NBC’s Prehistoric Docuseries Turns Extinction Into Absorbing Television

    A Mosquito in the Ear Review

    A Mosquito in the Ear Review: An Intimate Family Drama With a Sharp Emotional Sting

    My Family Season 2 Review

    My Family Season 2 Review: Netflix’s Italian Dramedy Finds Beauty in Broken Promises

    The Polygamist Review

    The Polygamist Review: Betrayal Burns Bright in Netflix’s 22-Episode Drama

    Proud Review

    Proud Review: Ignacy Liss Shines in HBO Max’s Striking New Series

    This Tempting Madness Review

    This Tempting Madness Review: Simone Ashley Anchors a Stylish Thriller of Memory and Marriage

    Find Your Friends Review

    Find Your Friends Review: A Sun-Bleached Thriller Lost in Its Own Haze

    Maternal Instinct Review

    Maternal Instinct Review: Jessica Dimmock Turns a Brutal Case Into a Controlled Documentary

    Viral Hit Review

    Viral Hit Review: School Violence, Viral Fame, and One Very Strange Mentor

  • Game Reviews
    Tavern Talk Stories: Dreamwalker Review

    Tavern Talk Stories: Dreamwalker Review: Gentle Magic, Warm Characters, and Slow-Burn Choice

    Unrailed 2: Back on Track Review

    Unrailed 2: Back on Track Review: Railway Panic Has Never Been This Fun

    The 7th Guest Remake Review

    The 7th Guest Remake Review: Gothic Mystery Meets Escape Room Design

    Crushed In Time Review

    Crushed In Time Review: Sherlock Holmes Gets Pulled Into a Brilliantly Broken Adventure

    NBA THE RUN Review

    NBA THE RUN Review: Streetball Energy With Room to Grow

    World Heroes Perfect Review

    World Heroes Perfect Review: History’s Strangest Warriors Return to Battle

    Voidling Bound Review

    Voidling Bound Review: Strange Creatures, Smart Systems, Strong Combat

    Dracamar Review

    Dracamar Review: Gentle Platforming With Vibrant Style

    BrokenLore: FOLLOW Review

    BrokenLore: FOLLOW Review – Psychological Horror Refined

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Netflix and Paramount Warner

    DOJ Clears Paramount’s $111 Billion Warner Bros. Deal With No Strings Attached

    Ronnie Schell

    Ronnie Schell, Last Surviving Star of ‘Gomer Pyle: U.S.M.C.,’ Dies at 94

    The Batman Part II

    Matt Reeves Calls Action on ‘The Batman: Part II’ in London

    Remove term: Maternal Instinct Maternal Instinct

    Netflix’s ‘Maternal Instinct’ Documents the Texas Fetal Abduction Case That Put Taylor Parker on Death Row

    Taylor Swift: The Official Release Party of a Showgirl Review

    Steven Spielberg Compares Taylor Swift to Lennon and McCartney at Songwriters Hall of Fame

    The Blair Witch Project

    Blair Witch Star Rei Hance Opts Out of Reboot Over AI Identity and Rights Concerns

    Jesse Eisenberg

    Jesse Eisenberg Refused to Return as Zuckerberg for Sorkin’s Sequel: ‘He Has His Problems With the Guy’

    Stop! That! Train!

    RuPaul’s Drag Race Arrives in Theaters With Stop! That! Train!, a Camp Disaster Spoof 10 Years in the Making

    Jack Innanen

    Jack Innanen Confirms He Turned Down a Starring Role in Heated Rivalry Season 2

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Surviving Earth Review

    Surviving Earth Review: NBC’s Prehistoric Docuseries Turns Extinction Into Absorbing Television

    A Mosquito in the Ear Review

    A Mosquito in the Ear Review: An Intimate Family Drama With a Sharp Emotional Sting

    My Family Season 2 Review

    My Family Season 2 Review: Netflix’s Italian Dramedy Finds Beauty in Broken Promises

    The Polygamist Review

    The Polygamist Review: Betrayal Burns Bright in Netflix’s 22-Episode Drama

    Proud Review

    Proud Review: Ignacy Liss Shines in HBO Max’s Striking New Series

    This Tempting Madness Review

    This Tempting Madness Review: Simone Ashley Anchors a Stylish Thriller of Memory and Marriage

    Find Your Friends Review

    Find Your Friends Review: A Sun-Bleached Thriller Lost in Its Own Haze

    Maternal Instinct Review

    Maternal Instinct Review: Jessica Dimmock Turns a Brutal Case Into a Controlled Documentary

    Viral Hit Review

    Viral Hit Review: School Violence, Viral Fame, and One Very Strange Mentor

  • Game Reviews
    Tavern Talk Stories: Dreamwalker Review

    Tavern Talk Stories: Dreamwalker Review: Gentle Magic, Warm Characters, and Slow-Burn Choice

    Unrailed 2: Back on Track Review

    Unrailed 2: Back on Track Review: Railway Panic Has Never Been This Fun

    The 7th Guest Remake Review

    The 7th Guest Remake Review: Gothic Mystery Meets Escape Room Design

    Crushed In Time Review

    Crushed In Time Review: Sherlock Holmes Gets Pulled Into a Brilliantly Broken Adventure

    NBA THE RUN Review

    NBA THE RUN Review: Streetball Energy With Room to Grow

    World Heroes Perfect Review

    World Heroes Perfect Review: History’s Strangest Warriors Return to Battle

    Voidling Bound Review

    Voidling Bound Review: Strange Creatures, Smart Systems, Strong Combat

    Dracamar Review

    Dracamar Review: Gentle Platforming With Vibrant Style

    BrokenLore: FOLLOW Review

    BrokenLore: FOLLOW Review – Psychological Horror Refined

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
The Fakenapping Review

Single Papa Review: Examining Paternal Love Versus Patriarchal Law

Taghiyev: Oil Review - A Beautiful but Static History Lesson

Home Entertainment Movies

The Fakenapping Review: When Patricide Becomes the Only Business Plan

Marcus Thorne by Marcus Thorne
6 months ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 5 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on TelegramSummarize with ChatGPTSummarize with Perplexity

Debt behaves like gravity in cinema, a pull that drags a protagonist downward until logic starts to warp. Sattam, played by Mohammed Aldokhei, lives inside that crushing field. He is a serial entrepreneur with a portfolio made of collapsed dreams and aggressive creditors. The film introduces him as a man cornered by the predatory math of a loan shark named Abu Atiq. The repayment deadline is absolute. The consequences of failure feel bodily.

Panic arrives dressed as strategy. Sattam sketches a plan defined by cowardice: he will stage his own abduction and squeeze a ransom from his estranged, wealthy father. The narrative then swerves with blunt force. The self-kidnapping curdles into a patricidal conspiracy. Sattam decides to kidnap the patriarch himself. That pivot, from hunted man to hunter, locks in the film’s central tension.

Amine Lakhnech directs this Saudi Arabian feature as a study in escalation, where every “solution” breeds a worse problem. The premise plays as absurd. The motivations sit in bleak economic reality. The film draws a stark binary in Sattam’s world: the son’s crushing poverty beside the father’s hoarding. The film plays as comedy. The ground beneath it stays terrifying, rooted in a man who has run out of options.

A Symphony of Incompetence

The film works inside the crime-comedy lane, summoning the frenetic, kinetic energy of a Guy Ritchie caper, with the usual hyper-competence absent. These criminals distinguish themselves through a profound inability to commit crimes.

The kidnapping of Sulaiman plays as a messy, amateurish disaster that spills across the screen. Sattam recruits Yacob, a foil played by Yazeed Almajyul. Yacob contributes panic, and the enterprise never finds steadiness. Their interplay becomes the comedic engine. We watch them fumble disguises and logistics, their ineptitude serving as a grimly funny comment on ambition.

The pacing mirrors the characters’ anxiety. Scenes rush forward with a breathlessness that mimics a panic attack. The rhythmic acceleration pushes the audience to accept the escalating stakes without pausing to scrutinize the logic. A clerical error transforms a ransom demand of 300 thousand riyals into 300 million, a mistake that propels the narrative from a localized family dispute into a chaotic spectacle.

Also Read

  • Best Christmas Movies
    30 Best Christmas Movies to Watch This Holiday Season
  • Best 2025 Movies
    Gazettely's 30 Best Movies of 2025
  • best 2025 games
    Gazettely's 30 Best Video Games of 2025
  • Chum Review
    Chum Review: A B-Movie Without Enough Bite
  • 30 Best Action Movies Ever
    30 Best Action Movies Ever: A Definitive History…
  • best 2025 tv shows
    Gazettely's 30 Best TV Shows of 2025

The humor relies heavily on situational irony and the universal language of the plan gone wrong. Some dialogue beats carry cultural nuances that can remain opaque to an international viewer. The physical vocabulary of failure needs no translation.

The film balances genuine tension with ridiculous execution. The threat of violence lands as real. Laughter follows from Sattam’s transparent attempts to avoid it, pathetic in their desperation. The audience gets tugged in two directions at once, clenching through the danger while the scheme collapses in plain sight, a neat little trick of timing and pressure.

The Existential Drifter and the Patriarch

Mohammed Aldokhei delivers a performance that anchors the film in a specific emotional reality. Sattam is a morally questionable figure, willing to terrorize his own parent for solvency. Aldokhei imbues him with a pathetic dignity that pulls empathy into the frame. He fits the noir archetype of the doomed man, reimagined for a farce.

The Fakenapping Review

Desperation registers as a constant, vibrating frequency of anxiety, rarely rising to a shout. He is a loser, and his refusal to accept his fate gives him a tragic dimension. It is hard to watch a man sprint from consequence to consequence and still believe he has choices, which is exactly the point: the film stages free will as a performance, then lets the mask slip.

Yazeed Almajyul, as the accomplice Yacob, provides the necessary counterpoint. Sattam functions as the architect of their doom. Yacob becomes the unwitting bricklayer, stealing scenes with reactions that highlight the absurdity of their predicament. The father, Sulaiman, played by Abdulaziz Al-Sokayreen, offers a performance of rigid stoicism. He reads as an immovable object facing Sattam’s unstoppable force of bad ideas, a figure built from silence and stubbornness. In noir terms, he is the wall the protagonist keeps punching, convinced the next hit will open a door.

The film casts Sattam as the black sheep, a stain on the family honor. The screenplay also suggests the family itself is flawed. The father is a miser who values currency over kin. The siblings sit in judgment, their moral superiority unearned. This dynamic sharpens the social observation, and it plants the story in an ethical gray zone where sympathy keeps shifting.

The inclusion of Sattam’s daughter serves as the emotional ballast. She is the human cost of his failures, the reason his desperation carries necessity alongside self-interest. Her presence prevents the film from dissolving into pure cynicism, even as it keeps a steady eye on how damage passes downward.

Neon Noir in the Urban Desert

Director Amine Lakhnech turns away from the dusty, sepia-toned aesthetic often lazily applied to regional cinema. He presents a visual landscape that feels modern and urban. The cinematography uses the harsh, artificial glow of supermarket fluorescents and the sterile, cold lighting of luxury interiors to frame the action. This is a world of surfaces and reflections, where faces look trapped behind glass and money feels like architecture.

The camera moves with a fluidity that suggests a higher budget, lending the production a slickness comparable to international streaming standards. The setting becomes a character in its own right, a modern Saudi Arabia defined by highways, commerce, and the stark division of wealth. Shadow and light do their noir work here, pushing the image toward a contemporary chiaroscuro, with clean lines that still feel slightly expressionistic in their severity.

The editing is sharp, often cutting on movement to maintain a high-velocity narrative flow. It creates a visual rhythm that matches the frantic internal state of the protagonist, and it keeps the audience’s perception tuned to urgency. The film occasionally reveals the limitations of its resources during the more action-oriented sequences. Certain practical effects or stunts lack the tactile weight of a blockbuster, feeling slightly weightless or staged. These technical shortcomings rarely break the immersion.

The sound design works hard to bridge the gap, using audio cues to ratchet up the tension when the visuals soften. The music underscores the comedic beats without sliding into cartoonish excess. Lakhnech treats the farce with the seriousness of a thriller, letting shadow, light, and tempo suggest that the darkness keeps closing in, even while the characters keep tripping over their own feet.

The Fakenapping is a Saudi Arabian crime-comedy that premiered globally on Netflix on December 11, 2025. Produced by the prominent studio Telfaz11 and directed by Amine Lakhnech, the film follows the chaotic journey of a failed entrepreneur who attempts to solve his financial ruin by kidnapping his own wealthy father. It features a notable cast of Saudi talent, including a guest appearance by football legend Saeed Al-Owairan. You can currently stream the movie exclusively on Netflix.

Full Credits

  • Title: The Fakenapping

  • Distributor: Netflix

  • Release date: December 11, 2025

  • Rating: TV-14

  • Running time: 85 minutes

  • Director: Amine Lakhnech

  • Writers: Abdulaziz Alessa, Ahmed Amer

  • Producers and Executive Producers: Abdullah Orabi, Telfaz11

  • Cast: Mohammed Aldokhei, Yazeed Almajyul, Abdulaziz Al-Sokayreen, Saeed Al-Owairan, Abdullah Aldrees, Khaled Hweijan, Abrar Faisal

  • Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Mohamed El Hadari

  • Editors: Mohammed Al-Fahad

  • Composer: Amine Lakhnech, Abdullah Orabi

The Review

The Fakenapping

7 Score

The Fakenapping is a frenetic, culturally specific farce that navigates the intersection of desperation and incompetence with slick visual flair. While it occasionally stumbles over its own ambition and some uneven action sequences, the charismatic lead performance by Mohammed Aldokhei and the sharp, observational humor make it a compelling watch. It is a modern, neon-soaked comedy of errors that proves desperation is a universal language, even if the dialect is distinctly Saudi.

PROS

  • Mohammed Aldokhei balances pathos and comedy effectively.
  • Amine Lakhnech’s direction offers a modern, high-contrast urban aesthetic.
  • The film moves with a kinetic energy that prevents boredom.
  • The shift from self-kidnapping to patricide adds a fresh layer to the heist genre.

CONS

  • Some stunts and effects feel lightweight or budget-constrained.
  • The escalating stakes sometimes strain credibility.
  • Certain comedic nuances may not land for international audiences.

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0

Tags: Abdulaziz Al-SokayreenAbdullah AldreesAmine LakhnechComedyCrimeFeaturedKhaled HweijanMohammed AldokheiNetflixSaeed Al-OwairanThe FakenappingThrillerYazeed Almajyul
Previous Post

Single Papa Review: Examining Paternal Love Versus Patriarchal Law

Next Post

Taghiyev: Oil Review – A Beautiful but Static History Lesson

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Is This Seat Taken? Review

    Is This Seat Taken? Review: A Satisfying Mental Workout

    1013 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Alice and Steve Review: Six Episodes of Escalating Madness

    2 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Trust Review: Squandered Potential and an Incoherent Plot

    6 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Tip Toe Review: Channel 4’s Five-Part Drama Turns Everyday Politeness Into Dread

    3 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Among Us Review: How the Game Plays on Paramount+

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Teach You A Lesson Review: School Corruption Meets Vigilante Justice

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Every Year After Review: Prime Video’s Summer Romance Finds Its Spark Away From the Main Couple

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

Sweet Magnolias Season 5 Review
TV Shows

Sweet Magnolias Season 5 Review: Serenity Finds Comfort in Change

20 hours ago
The Furious Review 1
Movies

The Furious Review: Kenji Tanigaki Builds a Brutal Action Machine

1 day ago
The Death of Robin Hood Review
Movies

The Death of Robin Hood Review: He Was No Hero, and Sarnoski Means It

1 day ago
Best Medicine Review
TV Shows

Best Medicine Review: Fox’s Coastal Dramedy Makes Kindness Its Best Medicine

4 days ago
Every Year After Review
TV Shows

Every Year After Review: Prime Video’s Summer Romance Finds Its Spark Away From the Main Couple

4 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Which of Alfred Hitchcock's 1960s thrillers is your all-time favorite?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2026 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely