(MENAFN- Arab Times) This year, with some mighty titles from the Maghreb
evaluated alongside the rest of continental Africa, the competitive potential
of the Middle East lineup handicapped here may seem a tad diminished.
Nevertheless, the territory boasts a possible short-list contender in
Palestinian helmer Elia Suleiman's wry travelog 'It Must Be Heaven', which
nabbed the international critics award at 2019 Cannes.
Back in 2003, Suleiman's second feature,
'Divine Intervention', marked the first of 12 submissions made by Palestine
over the years. During that time, the entries resulted in two nominations, both
for films helmed by Hany Abu-Assad: 'Paradise Now' (2005) and 'Omar' (2013).
Now, Suleiman, like Abu-Assad, is recognized as an elder statesman of
Palestinian filmmaking as well as an accomplished auteur whose films continue
to bear witness to the surreal and the absurd in Palestinian life at home and
abroad. Although his work is better-known in Europe than in the US, 'It Must Be
Heaven' represents the type of art-house fare likely to be recognized and put
forward by the executive committee.
While the other four titles from the Middle
East and those from Eurasia are not tipped as strong contenders, they still
exemplify interesting festival fare. After fielding a nominee in the past two
years (Ziad Doueiri's 'The Insult' and Nadine Labaki's 'Capernaum'), Lebanon's
hopes for a hat trick ride on helmer-writer Oualid Mouaness' '1982'. The drama
stars Labaki and marries politics with coming-of-age action during one tense
day at a private school on the outskirts of Beirut as Israel invades Lebanon.
Iran, with two wins during the past decade
thanks to Asghar Farhadi, musters a surprising entry with the poignant doc
'Finding Farideh', produced and directed by Azadeh Moussavi and Kourosh Ataee.
The partially crowdfunded film follows Amsterdam resident Eline Farideh Koning,
a charismatic transnational adoptee, who seeks to understand her ethnic
identity and perhaps locate her biological family when she makes a first trip
to Iran at the age of 39.
Saudi Arabia made its first foreign-language
submission in 2013 with debutant helmer Haifaa al-Mansour's coming-of-age story
'Wadjda'. Al-Mansour also directs this year's contempo social-issues drama 'The
Perfect Candidate'.
Although not as tightly scripted
or as charming as 'Wadjda', 'Candidate' continues her previous theme of the
challenges faced by women in the kingdom. The plot centers on a stubborn
physician from the provinces who enters her local city council election with
the vow to pave the dirt road leading to her hospital.
Kazakhstan, the largest of the former Soviet
Republics, is the only Eurasian country to score a nomination in the
foreign-language category, back with Sergi Bodrov's 'Mongol' in 2007. It can
also boast two shortlisted films: Ermek Tursunov's 2009 'Kelin' and Sergey
Dvortsevoy's 'Ayka' from 2018. Alas, this year's candidate, the historical epic
'Kazakh Khanate'.
Surreal
'The Golden Throne' from Rustem
Abdrashev plays as if randomly pieced together from the two miniseries he also
directed. In contrast, Kyrgyzstan fields the fascinating, surreal drama
'Aurora' from talented new helmer-writer Bekzat Pirmatov. Unfolding in a
fractured narrative style, the surprising, absurdist action takes place at the
Aurora, a Soviet-era sanitorium located on the shores of Lake Issyk-Kul.
Meanwhile, neighboring Uzbekistan submits its
first entry with the coming-of-age tale 'Hot Bread' from director Umid
Khamdamov. It centers on temperamental teen Zulfiya, who longs to leave the
sleepy village home she shares with her grandmother to join her mother in the
city.
Turkey has never received a foreign-language
nomination, and this year's entry, the slow-burn drama 'Commitment – Asli',
from one-time Berlinale Golden Bear-winner Semih Kaplanoglu, is unlikely to
change the situation.
Armenia's submission, the omnibus drama
'Lengthy Night', from Edgar Baghdasaryan, uses three stories and a special
stone to encompass a thousand years of Armenian history.
Also:
LOS ANGELES: When
young Saudi Arabian director Abdulmohsen Aldhabaan set out to
make his debut feature 'Last Visit' filmmaking and movie theaters were still
banned in his country.
That changed suddenly in late
2017 when Saudi's 35-year-old religion-related ban was lifted as part of social
and economic reforms. So the director and his producer immediately turned in
their screenplay to authorities and applied for a shooting permit, which they
got despite the fact that their father-and-son drama depicting generational
conflict pushes boundaries in several ways.
Thematically 'Last Visit' exposes
'masculine culture and patriarchy as I know it,' says Aldhabaan, adding that
the 16-year-old son in his film who is named Walid (played by Abdullah
Al-Fahad ) simply can't relate to Saudi Arabia 's conservative
traditions.
'With kids his age in Saudi
today, it's not even a matter of revolting against the past,' he says. 'They
actually just don't understand it.'
Walid and his father Nasser
(played by Osama Alqess )
travel from a big modern city to a rural village where Nasser's own father is
on his deathbed in the home of his uncle and two male cousins. There Walid
refuses to adhere to prayer and other conservative customs, isolating himself
from the other men in his family by wearing a huge set of wireless headphones.
Though you practically see only
men on screen throughout the whole film, 'the majority of the crew were women,'
the director notes, adding that when they shot outdoors the presence of these
women, some of whom did not wear headscarves, 'was problematic.'
At first 'people were upset, and
the town revolted on social media with posts such as: 'these people are coming
to our town, and they are making cinema, which is dangerous!',' says producer Mohammed
Alhamoud .
Having a regular shooting permit
really saved them. 'Without it we never would have finished the movie,' he
notes. 'We had a lot of outdoor scenes and we didn't want people to harass us.'
(RTRS)
That fear soon subsided, though,
to the point that by the end of the shoot some of the people who had complained
had become extras. (RTRS)
By Alissa Simon
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