Gulf Today

Sharjah celebrates diversity with 40 foreign language films

SIFF 2021 has handpicked a selection of five European and Asian documentar­ies to both entertain and captivate

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The Sharjah Internatio­nal Film Festival for Children and Youth (SIFF) continues to serve as an exciting plaform for young cinema enthusiast­s, with the eighth edition announcing an impressive list of 40 foreign language masterpiec­es, which will be screened virtually from October 10 – 15.

FUNN, the Sharjah-based organisati­on that promotes media arts learning among children and youth, has asserted that through the SIFF 2021 films showcase, the festival will celebrate the cultural and linguistic diversity of filmmakers from around the world.

Representi­ng nearly half of the total selection of more than 80 films at SIFF’S 2021 virtual edition, the foreign films across the five SIFF categories – feature films, student’s films, short films, internatio­nal short films, documentar­ies and animations – category will feature cinematic work ranging from thrilling dramas and light-hearted comedies to those that highlight unique perspectiv­es of childhood across cultures. The curated movies target children of all ages including from below 7 to the 14 + age group.

Six films, targeting children in the 8+ age group, feature in the Student’s Film category. These include the silent short film, Coffin, by Yuanqing Cai, Nathan Crabot, Houzhi Huang, Mikolaj Janiw, Mandimby Lebon, and Theo Tran Ngoc; La Bestia, a graduation short about a transforma­tive train journey in Spanish; and the French, You Sold My Rollerskat­es?, a delightful­ly charming film that offers an insighful and emotive lesson on growing up and leting go.

At 23 minutes, A Trip to My Friend’s Home in the Indian language, Bengali, is the longest in the category. The two English language movies made by students include Mum’s Sweater and Goodbye Robin.

Featuring a mix of mandarin and English is Gina Tan’s Pencil that explores the sense of right and wrong when a friendship is put to the test; while Taiwanese filmmaker Diana Chao’s Big Litle Man is a gripping drama of the sense of helplessne­ss that propels a young boy to independen­ce.

Other films in the category include Doubout – Standup in French by Pierre La Gall and Sarah Malléon; Timo’s Winter in Italian by Giulio Mastromaur­o; and Mommy’s Calf by Viktoria Runtsova from Russia. The chosen movies are for the 8+ and 10+ age groups.

A total of 19 animation films, predominan­tly in English, French, Spanish and Russian by filmmakers from across Argentina, New Zealand, France, Canada, Brazil, UK, USA, and Belgium, amongst other nations, will enthral young audiences in the 8+ category. Prominent names here include Carlos Algara and Catalina Serna’s My Brother Luca; Lynn Tomlinson’s The Elephant’s Song, portrayed in handcrated animation that was created frame by frame with clay-on-glass and oil pastel animation.

A selection of films including Galen Fot’s Tiny T. Rex and the Impossible Hug and Hannah Jones’ The Snail and the Whale target tiny tots up to age 7.

Targeting children in the age group 8+, foreign language movies in the Feature Films category include the Persian language Walnut, directed by Mohammadre­za Haji Gholami, which narrates the story of a child who feels his hands are turning black because of a ‘sin’ he has committed.

Korean director KIM Jin-yu’s Bori sheds light on the life of a hearing child in a deaf family while Kings of Mulberry Street is an English comedydram­a by South African director Judy Naidoo.

SIFF 2021 has handpicked a selection of five European and Asian documentar­ies to both entertain and captivate and which are also aimed at generating a lasting interest in the genre amongst children in the 10+ to 14+ age groups.

Prominent films in this category include Norwegian filmmaker Solveig Melkeraaen’s School by the Sea which catches the rainbow of sadness and excitement, resistance and resilience, loss and growth, of a child adapting to change while in Italian director Paola Sorrentino’s Girls Talk About Football, six girls share their experience­s playing a male-dominated sport.

For more informatio­n on the festival’s activities and its registrati­on process, please visit the SIFF website www.siff.ae, or FUNN Instagram @sharjahiff.

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A scene from the film ‘Big Little Man.’
↑ A scene from the film ‘Big Little Man.’

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