Ramzi Bashour's 'Hot Water' premiered in the US Dramatic Competition at the 2026 Sundance Film Festival, offering a fresh take on the American road movie genre through a mother-son journey. Starring Lubna Azabal as a Lebanese-American professor and Daniel Zolghadri as her teenage son, the film explores family bonds amid cultural clashes during a drive from Indiana to California. Anchored by Azabal's sharp performance, it blends comedy and pathos in quiet, emotional moments.
'Hot Water,' directed by Ramzi Bashour, updates the classic American road movie with a cross-cultural lens. The story centers on Layal, a college professor of Arabic literature who has recently quit smoking and is dealing with personal stresses, including her bedridden mother in Beirut. Her son, Daniel, a high school student, faces expulsion after hitting another boy with a hockey stick during a match. When Layal's ex-husband, played by Gabe Fazio, offers to house Daniel in Santa Cruz to finish school, the pair embarks on a road trip from Indiana to California in their Subaru.
The film mines humor and emotion from the generational and cultural differences between Layal, a Lebanese transplant, and her American-born son. Layal's sharp wit shines through, as when she describes Las Vegas: “Like Dubai, bullshit in the middle of the desert.” Along the way, they encounter quirky characters, including an earthy woman portrayed by Dale Dickey who enjoys long hugs and soaking in Colorado's hot springs—the title's reference—and a hitchhiker who angrily yells, “You are not good people.” These interactions highlight small moments leading to catharsis, contrasting Layal's anxiety with Daniel's relaxed demeanor.
Phone calls with Layal's mother and sister in Lebanon add depth, revealing her longing for home and providing emotional context. Azabal, known from Denis Villeneuve's 2010 Oscar-nominated 'Incendies,' delivers a multifaceted performance blending humor and vulnerability. Zolghadri complements her with a mellower portrayal, unveiling his character's softer side.
Cinematographer Alfonso Herrera Salcedo captures the vast American landscapes and the duo's hidden emotions, while the film's languid rhythm builds to rewarding emotional beats. Reviewed on January 23, 2026, at the Eccles Theater in Park City, Utah, 'Hot Water' is a USA 2026 production with producers Jesse Hope, Max Walker-Silverman, and Josh Peters. Music is by James Elkington and Bashour.