this post is fantastic clomid or serophene Wadjda is a film about working for change under the radar, with small victories. Al-Mansour had to a make sacrifices to get the film made. In the more conservative neighbourhoods of Riyadh she directed scenes from inside a van, for fear of sparking protests. Some have questioned how restrictions like this can provoke anything but fury. But this film shows that there are subtle ways to attack injustice. Wadjda's response when faced with the outrage of her teacher is to sigh. The older woman is enforcing men's rules, which ??? for Wadjda ??? are to be shouldered only if they can't be shrugged off. There's no out-and-out polemic against Saudi society. It's the everyday nature of Wadjda's frustration that gets to you.