(MENAFN- The Peninsula) The Peninsula
Doha: Filmmakers from the region and beyond, whose projects are nurtured at Qumra, the annual industry incubator event by the Doha film Institute (DFI), have highlighted its role as 'one of a kind' and 'very important for the world today' to build new voices in cinema, and lauded DFI's support for enhancing the credibility of their projects.
This year, Qumra is mentoring 44 films, including feature narratives, documentaries, web series and shorts from 23 countries as part of the Institute's mission to accelerate the success of emerging filmmakers and enable them to take their projects to audiences around the world.
The selected Qumra projects stand out for their powerful, original, and creative themes and cinematic sensibilities. One such project is the web series Miara (Morocco, Qatar), directed by Talal Selhami and Jawad Lahlou. Set in the 8th Century, North Africa, it is about a young Berberian woman, who discovers that her murdered father was a fallen Viking King.
The directors said the film is also an exploration of identity and roots and aims to dispel the notion that largely mounted series with high ambition and scale are hard to be made in the Arab world.“Recreating the period is a painstaking process, which is why financing is central to accomplishing this,” said Talal.
“We have already shot the pilot, and the encouragement we receive from Qumra is exceptional. We hope to engage with more producers and this platform offers us that opportunity.”
Merging the worlds of cinema and dance, Backstage (Morocco, Tunisia, Belgium, France) by Afef Ben Mahmoud and Khalil Benkirane, is about Aida, a member of a contemporary dance troupe touring Morocco.
Afef said she drew on her experience as a professional dancer and theatre for the film. The challenge in their journey was“financing,” with Khalil adding that“we got a lot of rejections saying our project was too ambitious. Today, we are close to landing our 'ship' safely by the shore. There is an audience who appreciate arts, music and theatre, and since our project is about the life of a dance troupe, it will appeal to them.”
Khalil said Qumra brings the crème la de crème of the industry to mentor emerging projects and“you don't find all these people together in one place anywhere else.
For us, we are close to completing the film. We still need finance and distribution, and with all these experts coming and watching 20 minutes of our film is an opportunity to take our film to the next level of visibility.”
Amanda Nell Eu, the director of Tiger Stripes (Malaysia, Taiwan, Singapore, France, Germany, The Netherlands, Indonesia, Qatar), explores the theme of empowerment, from an intimate personal level about a girl who discovers a terrifying secret about her physical self.
She said being at Qumra has given a wide rope for her to network with distributors, film festival directors and other professionals.