BAFTA Goes To The Arab World - Film Information
24 June 08
The full listing of film Film Information for BAFTA Goes To The Arab World, our celebration of Arab Cinema.
OUT OF COVERAGE
SYRIA | NATIONAL FILM ORGANISATION SYRIA | 100 MINS | CERT TBC | DRAMA/COMEDY
Dir: Abdullatif Abdulhamid
Scr: Abdullatif Abdulhamid
Cast: Fayez Kozok, Siba Moubarak, Fadouwa Soleiman, Mohamad Kanouh, Hiroki Okazaki, Mouwafak Ahmad, Iman Abdel Azziz
In Arabic with English subtitles
Amer is a middle-aged man living a busy life. He takes care of his own family as well as helps his friend Zuhair’s wife and daughter to survive during his friend’s absence in prison. Added to this is a bag of odd jobs which combine working as Arabic tutor to a Japanese student, working as sweet maker in a sweet shop, and taking up taxi driving on the side. The tempo of his life becomes almost slapstick-like. Amer's wife is not happy with her ever absent husband. Zuhair has been imprisoned for many years by now - one of the country’s political prisoners with an uncertain future. When it looks like he is about to be released, Amer and Zuhair’s wife realise that they have feelings for one another.
We are sorry to announce that Director, Abdullatif Abdulhamid is now unable to join us for a Q&A following the screening.
EYE OF THE SUN (EIN SHAMS)
+ Q&A with Ibrahim El Batout
EGYPT/MOROCCO | BATOUT FILMS | 90 MINS | CERT TBC | DRAMA
Dir: Ibrahim El Batout
Scr: Tamer El Said, Ibrahim El Batout
Cast: Hanan Youssef, Boutros Boutros Ghaly, Ramadan Khater, Hanan Adel, Samar Abdelwahab, Mariam Abodouma
From once being the capital of Egypt during the Pharaonic era and a sacred location marked by the visit of Jesus and the Virgin Mary, Ein Shams has become one of Cairo’s poorest and most neglected neighborhoods. Through the eyes of Shams, an eleven-year-old girl inhabitant of this neighborhood, the film captures the sadness and magic that envelops everyday life in Egypt. In a series of tragic events, the characters of the film showcase the intricacies of Egypt’s political system and social structure, and give a glimpse into the grievances of the Middle East region and the complex relationships of its nations.
'Shams' opens with a cab roaming the streets of Cairo. A singer named Mariam hops in the cab. She sees a photo of a little girl besides the driver. She tells him that the girl is pretty. He tells her that she is his daughter and begins to tell her story. Inspired by her story, Mariam decides to sing a melancholy Iraqi tune in the small cultural centre she is performing in. Her song resonates deeply with another Mariam who is a member of the audience. The Mariam from the audience recalls her harrowing experiences of working as a doctor in Iraq while conducting research in 2003 on the link between the use of Depleted Uranium weapons in the bombing of Iraq and cancer. The taxi driver Ramadan is Sham’s father, and also personal chauffeur of wealthy business man Selim bey who is on the verge of bankruptcy. Hany, his nephew, is parliamentary candidate for the Ein Shams district.
The film deals with corruption of the apathetic political elite, the tyranny of the political system, and the impact of economic profiteering and war on the health and lives of ordinary people.
SHE & HE
+ Q&A with Elyes Baccar
TUNISIA | GAIA PRODUCTIONS | 93 MINS | CERT TBC | DRAMA
Dir: Elyes Baccar
Scr: Elyes Baccar
Cast: tbc
He chooses to close the door of his soul, the window of his life, and tries to sleep for a long time. No television, no radio, no telephone and no contact with the external world...
She came in a rainy night and knocked on his door. He refused her by ignoring then rejecting her presence. They engage in fetishistic, sado-masochistic acts that seem to bring him back to life in their own peculiar way. Does she succeed in changing his reality or was she a fantasy, a figment of the imagination of a man that seems mentally unwell?
Paloma Delight
+ Q&A with Nadir Moknèche

ALGERIA | FILMS DU LOSANGE | 128 MINS | COMEDY
Dir: Nadir Moknèshe
Scr: Nadir Moknèshe
Cast: Nadia Kaci, Aylin Prandi, Daniel Lundh
Need a building permit? Feeling lonely tonight? Call the national benefactress, Madame Aldjeria - she has the answer. When it comes to surviving in today's Algeria, no scam is too daunting for the woman who has adopted her country's name. If they're pretty and lacking in principles, her recruits can make a career for themselves. The latest of these, Paloma, is quite a hit, especially with Riyad, Madame Aldjeria's son. But the purchase of Caracalla Springs, the dream that should allow Aldjeria's clan to start a new life, proves to be one scam too many.
UNDER THE BOMBS
LEBANON | ARTIFICIAL EYE | 95 MINS | DRAMA
Dir: Philippe Aractingi
Scr: Philippe Aractingi, Michel Leviant
Cast: Nada Abu Farhat, Georges Khabbaz, Bshara Atallah, Rawia Elchab
Zeina lives in Dubai. In the midst of a divorce, she sends her son Karim to stay wither sister in Kherbet Selem, a small village, South of Lebanon, to spare him from his parents’ fighting. A few days later war breaks out in Lebanon. Desperately worried, Zeina immediately heads to Lebanon via Turkey. Because of the blockade she doesn’t reach the port of Beirut until the day of the ceasefire. There she meets Tony, the only taxi-driver who agrees to take her to the South.
Tony is a Christian. He lives in Beirut. His brother lives in Israel. Zeina is a Shiite. They have little in common but under these circumstances, that is irrelevant. They search the refugee centres across a ravaged country. When they get to Kherbet Selem, the town is in ruins. Zeina’s sister has been killed and Ali, a young boy, tells them that Karim has been taken away by French journalists. Zeina and Tony set out in search of the lost child...a journey that brings them together as they encounter death and destruction everywhere.
Under the Bombs is a visceral expression of anger and pain from a Lebanese man who could no longer tolerate seeing his country ransacked by war. This war began on 12 July 2006. Ten days later, in the most precarious of circumstances, Philippe Aractingi began shooting Under the Bombs. He only hired two actors. The rest of the characters in the film: refugees, journalists, soldiers, religious people and militants, all played their own roles. All of them, caught in the turmoil and in the ruins of war-torn Lebanon, were living this new tragedy as an intimate part of themselves. This road movie is a fictional story set in harsh reality, giving each scene a vivid poignancy.
Shorts
A Stranger in his Own Country
Dir Hassanain Al Hani from Independent Film & Television College, Baghdad, Iraq, 2007, 10 mins
Thousands of Iraqis have been displaced by sectarian violence and have had to seek refuge in other parts of the country. This is a portrait of Abu Ali, a refugee from Kirkuk living in a displaced person’s camp on the outskirts of Kerbala. He is a peace-loving man with a keen sense of justice, trying to find a way to survive and provide for his family in the difficult circumstances in which they now find themselves.
A Candle for the Shabandar Café
Dir Emad Ali from Independent Film & Television College, Baghdad, Iraq, 2007, 23 mins
Founded in 1917, The Shabandar Café on Al Mutanabi Street, in the heart of the old centre of Baghdad, was a cultural landmark, where generations of Iraqis came to discuss and debate literature and politics - a living repository of Iraqi intellectual history and one of the last places where people could gather to exchange ideas. Emad had shot most of his film by the end of 2006, but in March 2007, a massive car bomb destroyed the Shabandar Café, all the bookshops on Mutanabi Street, and killed and wounded scores of people. Days later, Baghdad’s poets and artists held a wake in the ruins of the street they loved so much and Emad took a small camera and went back to film. As he was leaving he was attacked, his camera stolen and he was shot in the legs and chest. His own story is an epilogue to his film about the Shabandar Café and Mutanabi Street - Before and after they were destroyed.
The Singing Barber of Mosul
Dir Katia Saleh, Lebanon, 21 mins
A story about a frustrated Iraqi barber from Mosul whose dream is to sing Celine Dion and become a super star. He flies to Western-style Beirut to participate in the Middle East version of Pop Idol.
Ashura: Blood and Beauty
Dir Katia Saleh, Lebanon, 20 mins
Filmed over three years through the biggest Shia ceremony in South Lebanon, this film is a contemporary look at the 1300 year old Ashura Shia ritual. The mix of modernity and tradition in Lebanon has made Ashura a platform for young people to meet each other. This film reveals a side to Ashura that the world has not yet seen - a side that is not bloody and violent but ambiguous and compelling.
And to the Arabs of Haifa a Special Message Dir Razi Najjar, Palestine, 2006, 3 mins
A couple in Haifa watch a broadcast addressed to them - 'the Arabs of Haifa', by the leader of Hizbollah, Hassan Nasrallah, during the 2006 Israeli war with Lebanon.
A World Apart within 15 minutes
Dir Enas Muthaffar, Palestine, 2006, 3 mins
A woman driving in her car asks for directions from Israelis for reaching Ramallah.
A Plate of Sardines
Dir Omar Amiralay, Syria, 1997, 19 mins
'The first time I heard of Israel, I was in Beirut; the conversation was about a plate of sardines. I was six years old; Israel was two.' In the company of filmmaker Mohammad Malas, Omar Amiralay revisits the ruins of the destroyed village of Quneytra and reflects on Syria’s Golan occupied by Israel.
The Water Guard
Dir Walid Al Shehhi, Emirates ,11 mins
A rare opportunity to see a short by one of Emirate’s emerging film makers.
Khalass
LEBANON | JLA AUDIOVISUAL | 101 MINS | DRAMA
Dir: Borhane Alaouie
Scr: Borhane Alaouie
Cast: Fady Abi Khalil, Natasha Achkar, Rifaat Tarabaye
This film is set in present-day Beirut, in the midst of chaotic reconstruction. Ahmed and Robby became friends during the war, sharing similar dreams; Ahmed's was poetry and theatre, Robby's was cinema. Both dreamed of a better world, and like many others they fought for that dream, but came out of the war with a bitter feeling of betrayal and disappointment. Ahmed works as a columnist for a local newspaper. Robby tries to make ends meet by directing vague video documentaries about the environment, but nobody is interested in them.
Captain Abu Raed
+ Q&A with Amin Matalqa
JORDAN | FORTISSIMO | 110 MINS | DRAMA
Dir: Amin Matalqa
Scr: Amin Matalqa
Cast: Nadim Sawalha, Hussein Al-Sous, Rana Sultan, Uday Al-Quiddissi, Ghandi Saber
Abu Raed is a lonely janitor at Amman’s International Airport. Never having realised his dreams of seeing the world, he experiences it vicariously through books and brief encounters with travelers. But after finding a discarded captain’s hat, he is befriended by a group of children believing him to be an airline pilot. And thus the friendship begins...
Captain Abu Raed is the story of everyday people intersecting across social boundaries. It is a story of dreams, friendship, forgiveness and sacrifice. The film won the Audience Award at the Sundance Film Festival; and Best Actor at the Dubai Film Festival.
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BAFTA Publishing 2008
Read the event brochure and learn more about Arab cinema
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