China Daily

Chinese movies shine in Morocco

- XINHUA

RABAT, MOROCCO — The 23rd edition of the Internatio­nal Mediterran­ean Film Festival opened on Saturday in Morocco’s northern city of Tetouan, with China as the guest of honor. The festival, which runs until April 2, will screen several Chinese movies reflecting various areas of China’s film industry.

Among the movies, which will be screened during the festival, there are Wu Ershan’s movie Mojin: The Lost Legend, Dante Lam’s Operation Mekong, Xu Haofeng’s The Master and Cao Baoping’s The Dead End.

“In the past few editions, the festival has opened up to countries outside of the Mediterran­ean region. We hosted the Iranian, Mexican and Chilean movies and today we chose China,” the director of the festival Ahmed EL Ho us ni told Xinhua.

He stressed that the Chinese film-making has distinguis­hed itself in recent years as one of the leading industries in the world, adding that the festival aims to present this experience to wider Moroccan public.

Honoring Chinese cinema in the festival is another facet of the friendly bilateral relationsh­ip, he said, adding that ties between China and Morocco have witnessed a significan­t progress both economical­ly and culturally.

The official competitio­n of the festival includes 24 films from 15 Mediterran­ean countries, including 12 feature films and 12 documentar­y films.

The feature films will be contesting for the Grand Prix Tamouda d’or, whereas the documentar­y films will be competing for the Tetouan Grand Prix for documentar­y films.

The jury of the feature films will be presided by the Egyptian director Yousry Nasrallah, while the documentar­y jury will be headed by French screen writer Thomas Bauer.

Establishe­d in 1985, the Tetouan Internatio­nal Film Festival focuses on the promotion of films from Mediterran­ean countries, and it is gaining influence as a major project in Morocco.

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