Film Algerien X Biyouna -
But the film was crumbling. Vinegar syndrome had eaten half of it.
She looked at Lina. “You didn’t just save a film. You saved a memory of kindness.” Film Algerien X Biyouna
Lina had always felt torn between two worlds: her grandmother’s memories of old Algiers — the music, the whitewashed alleys, the scent of jasmine — and the modern city of glass towers and forgotten stories. She was studying cinema at the Université d'Alger, but her heart wasn’t in the theory. She wanted to feel Algeria, not just analyze it. But the film was crumbling
The old archivist, Monsieur Omar, a man who had once worked as a projectionist during the golden age of Algerian cinema, shook his head. “X means ‘Xenion,’ child. An old project. Only one copy. Biyouna was just twenty. She played a woman who finds an orphaned boy from the other side — a French child, lost after the war. The title was La Rue sans Haine — The Street Without Hate. But they shelved it. Said it was too early. Too healing.” “You didn’t just save a film
That night, Lina understood something she would carry forever: restoring a story is an act of hope. And sometimes, the most powerful Algerian film ever made is not about revolution — but about a woman, a child, and a street without hate. Even when history seems broken beyond repair, small acts of restoration — of films, of memories, of human connection — can heal wounds across generations. Kindness is never lost; it only waits to be found again.
In a small, dusty film archive in Algiers, a young film student named Lina discovers a damaged, forgotten reel labeled “Algérien X” — an obscure movie from the 1970s. The only clue is a handwritten note: “Biyouna’s first scene.” With the help of an old projectionist, she embarks on a journey to restore the film, learning that “X” doesn’t mean adult content — but stands for “Xenion” — an ancient Greek word for a gift to a stranger. The film turns out to be a lost short where a young Biyouna plays a storyteller who helps a lost French-Algerian boy find his way home after the war of independence.