Casablanca Film Fest acclaims Kuwaiti movie ‘In Paradox’

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Female-focused festival to open with Iran prison doc ‘Sunless Shadows’

Film director Hamad Al-Sarraf

CASABLANCA, Morocco, Oct 26, (Agencies): Jurors of the Casablanca Film Festival have acclaimed the Kuwaiti film “In Paradox”. The film director, Hamad Al-Sarraf, expressed in remarks to Kuwait News Agency (KUNA) his satisfaction at the jury acclamation of his first film, hoping the Kuwaiti movie industry would lure further such praise.

“It is quite encouraging that my first movie has lured applause from the committee of jurors at an Arab festival that has witnessed competition among diverse experiences,” said Al-Sarraf to KUNA after the festival conclusion, late on Friday.

Kuwaiti film ‘In Paradox’ screened at Casablanca Festival

He pledged to screen the film at Kuwaiti theatres soon.

Meanwhile, Abdulsattar Naji, member of the jurors’ committee, told the Kuwaiti news agency that Al-Sarraf’s experience signals emergence of a new generation of movies that are different in form and substance from conventional films in the Arab world.

The commission members unanimously credited the Kuwaiti movie. “This is significant for a young director screening his film the first time,” Naji said.

Al-Sarraf is a promising asset for the movie making because of his studies of the industry and expanded knowledge of various schools and cinematic technologies, he added.

The Kuwaiti movie narrates story of a man who seeks to uncover a mystery and stop haunting memories, struggling between reality and illusion.

The festival grand prix went to the Iraqi movie “Yara”, directed by Abbas Fadhl, and the Syrian short film, “Jury”, directed by Yazan Najdat Anzour.

Shoring up artistic director Orwa Nyrabia’s commitment to showcasing more women’s stories and platforming more women’s voices, IDFA has announced that this year’s festival features the highest percentage of female filmmakers in the event’s 31-year history: 64% of competition titles and 47% of the total program.

“Reaching a fairer representation was much easier than it seemed to be,” noted Nyrabia. “We only had to keep our goal in mind. The outstanding films that found their way to us this year was a humble reminder that we are in the presence of exceptional female filmmakers.”

Depicts

The festival opens with the world premiere of Mehrdad Oskouei’s “Sunless Shadows”, which depicts five young Iranian women complicit in the murders of abusive husbands, fathers, or brothers-in-law. Oskouei’s film competes in the Feature-Length Documentary Competition alongside Jorgen Leth’s “I Walk”; Heidi Hassan and Patricia Perez Fernandez’s “In a Whisper”; Marianne Khoury’s “Let’s Talk”; Kivu Ruhorahoza’s “Europa: ‘Based on a True Story’”; Laura Herrero Garvin’s “La Mami”; and Pushpendra Singh’s “Pearl of the Desert”. Rounding out the selection of 12 world or international premieres are Valentina Pedicini’s “Faith”; Hilal Baydarov’s “Mother and Son”; Maasja Ooms’s “Punks”; Marlene Edoyan’s “The Sea Between Us”; and Seung-Jun Yi’s “Shadow Flowers”.

There’s an equally global flavor to the debut titles competing for the First Appearance Prize, many with themes of family, place and belonging. The list comprises Alyx Ayn Arumpac’s “Aswang”; Alejandro Salgado’s “Barzakh”; Ilia Povolotskiy’s “Froth”; Eva Marie Rodbro’s “I Love You I Miss You I Hope I See You Before I Die”; Carol Benjamin’s “I Owe You a Letter About Brazil”; Malgorzata Goliszewska and Katarzyna Mateja’s “Lessons of Love”. Completing the lineup are Tali Yankelevich’s “My Darling Supermarket”; Meng Han’s “Smog Town”; Lucy Parker’s “Solidarity”; Marija Stojnic’s “Speak So I Can See You”; Simon Uribe Martinez’s “Suspension”; and Nino Orjonikidze and Vano Arsenishvili’s “A Tunnel”.

The same universality is true of the Mid-Length Documentary Competition, which this year features five world premieres. The selection is made up of Madeleine Leroyer’s “#387”; Jalal Vafaee’s “Anticlockwise”; Ira A. Goryainova’s “Bile”; Marina Meijer’s “Carousel”; Elina Talvensaari’s “Lady Time”; Remi Itani’s “A Long Breath”; Anton Terni’s “Mirador”; Andrea Testa’s “Mother-Child”; Leslie Lagier’s “North”; Galina Leontieva’s “The Season When Velvet Antlers Get Ripe”; Pawel Chorzepa’s “Sonny”; Maciej Cuska’s “The Whale from Lorono”; and “You Think the Earth Is a Dead Thing” by Florence Lazar.

Over in the experimental DocLab section, projects competing for the Digital Storytelling prize are Metahaven’s “Elektra”; Francesca Panetta and Halsey Burgund’s “In the Event of a Moon Disaster”; Bruce Alcock and Jeremy Mendes’ Far Away from Far Away”; Agnieska Polska’s “The Happiest Thought”; Diego Kompel’s “The Inhabited House”; Jumoke Sanwo’s “Lagos at Large”; Tabita Rezaire’s “Mamelles Ancestrales”; Kylie Boltin and Matt Smith’s “Missing”; Roel Wouters and Luna Maurer’s “My Inner Wolf”; and Victoria Mapplebeck’s VR entry “The Waiting Room”.

The festival runs from Nov 20 to Dec 1.

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