The short movie “The Stupid American” critiques Western indifference to Gaza’s slaughter, blending Quranic verse, punk-rock rage, and grotesque satire.
In an age dominated by algorithmic outrage and geopolitical hypocrisy, Qatari multidisciplinary artist Hamda Sultan Al-Suwaidi’s short film The Stupid American (الأمريكي الغبي) boldly challenges the West’s indifferent stance towards Israel’s war on the Gaza Strip, delivering a sharp and unapologetic critique.
Blending visceral visuals, Quranic reflection, and punk-rock energy, the film dissects the chasm between privilege and moral responsibility in a world desensitised by consumerism and performative activism.
Al-Suwaidi’s work, blending dark satire with Quranic introspection, challenges viewers to interrogate their own roles within systems of power and indifference.
Her artistic sensibilities are rooted in a childhood shaped by unlikely cultural crosscurrents. Growing up in Qatar, she found inspiration in the rebellious ethos of 2000s American rock bands such as Green Day, whose seminal album American Idiot (2004) critiqued media manipulation and wartime hypocrisy, themes she argues remain acutely relevant today.
“The song’s message remains strikingly current,” she noted, referencing U.S. support for different war crimes, particularly Israel’s war in Gaza, which have resulted in over 50,000 deaths since October 2023. The majority of the victims are women and children, according to the Palestinian Ministry of Health in Gaza.
The album’s titular track, which condemns blind nationalism, reflects Al-Suwaidi’s critique of U.S. foreign policy, particularly its unwavering support for Israel, which has recently received $4bn in military assistance. The total U.S. military aid to Israel stands at $251.2bn over 66 years (1959–2024), according to Fred Economic Data.
Central to Al-Suwaidi’s narrative is a Quranic framework that underscores humanity’s dual capacity for creation and destruction.
Citing Surah At-Tin (95:4–5), “We created humankind in the finest form, then reduced them to the lowest of the low,” she posits that modern complacency in the face of atrocities like Gaza’s devastation represents a collective failure to honour divine potential.
With 90 percent of Gaza’s population facing acute food insecurity, as reported by UNRWA, the film’s closing maxim – “Sustenance is a blessing from God; use it wisely” – serves as a stark rebuke of global consumerism and moral apathy.
Through gruesome scenes that force “the audience to confront an uncomfortable reality” and a deliberately absurd American protagonist, portrayed by actor Ali Fahad Majd, Al-Suwaidi employs shock tactics to disrupt the numbing effects of what she describes as a “dystopian reality,” where genocide competes with Instagram reels for public consciousness.
The film’s unflinching portrayal of Palestinian suffering has struck a chord with those directly impacted by the war. Enas Al Ghoul, a Palestinian agricultural engineer from Gaza, responded to the film on social media: “You have shown the world our suffering in Gaza… What we are experiencing today is an unprecedented genocide.”
She emphasised the need for solidarity, stating, “We in Gaza need your support and for you to stand with us,” while critiquing those who normalise oppression as engaging in “minor shirk.”
Maha ElAsad, the co-director of The Stupid American, expands this critique to the performative nature of modern activism, likening hashtag campaigns to seasonal trends that offer fleeting solidarity but little sustained impact.e
ElAsad’s assertion that “the world isn’t built for true change” echoes the film’s broader thesis, that systemic inertia often co-opts even well-intentioned efforts, reducing ethical obligations to mere performance.
At its core, The Stupid American is less a call to action than a mirror held to the contradictions of a world teetering between empathy and complicity.
“This film was a playful yet pointed reflection on the tension between self-interest, moral responsibility, and the uncomfortable truth that, in many ways, we are all just moving within a script that’s already been written,” ElAsad concluded.
