Link to the n*de dudes
I felt like I should profile one of the actors from In the Hand of Dante, to get something of value from it (other than picking up my bilingual edition of The Inferno again). So I checked the actors who played teenage Dante, the murdered Bartender, the murdered boy, the guy who killed his father, and Mephistopheles, but none of them were suitable. How about the boy who tells his uncle, "I just killed a kid"? It's not clear in the movie (nothing is), but he grows up to be focus character Nick (Oscar Isaacs, below).
Ibrahim Elouahabi gives his pronouns (he/his), and speaks Arabic. That's enough for a profile.
Not just Arabic. He also speaks Turkish and Darija (Moroccan Arabic) and he is studying French.
N*de Moroccan guy on RG Beefcake and Boyfriends
Darija is not intelligible with Modern Standard Arabic: it has reduced the number of vowels, adapted its grammar to Tamazight (Berber), and borrowed much of its vocabulary from French: forshita (fork), tabla (table), boulis (police).
His on-screen performances begin with two shorts, The Prescription (2020), no description available, and Roque (2022), about Salvadorean poet Roque Dalton. Ibrahim plays Roque as a boy, and Jaden McKnew (left) as an adult.
Next came a small role in Audrey's Children (2024), a biopic of Dr. Audrey Evans, who developed "revolutionary treatments" for sick children.
In Ebenezer the Traveler (2024), the ghosts of Scrooge, his sister, Jacob Marley, and a grown-up Tiny Tim are assigned to help an aspiring singer in modern-day Oklahoma. I think Ibrahim plays her son.
More after the break



















