Arab News

A panel of experts offered advice and encouragem­ent to budding filmmakers and discussed the challenges ahead

- AMEERA ABID

JEDDAH: As Saudi Arabia prepares to reopen its cinemas, a panel of experts in the film industry gathered to discuss the future of cinematic story telling in the Kingdom and the challenges that lie ahead.

The Saudi Art Council, in collaborat­ion with the American Film Showcase, brought together local and internatio­nal experts on Monday to share their thoughts and opinions about what needs to be done for the Kingdom’s cinema industry which is on a growth path after a 35-year ban on cinemas was lifted late last year.

“There needs to be a law infrastruc­ture for the cinema, so people can be directed in the right direction,” said Saudi actor and comedian, Hisham Fageeh, one of the panelists.

“Making films is a process of reducing damage because there is so much that can go wrong,” said Fageeh, who co-produced “Barakah Meets Barakah” — a film submitted for considerat­ion in the best foreign language film category at the Oscars in 2016.

The US consul general in Jeddah, Matthias J. Mitman, introduced the panelists at Monday’s event, before handing over the discussion to moderator Nestor Vences, the communicat­ion manager of the American Film Showcase.

“If you know what you want, you should go after that immediatel­y, because not a lot of people usually know what they want,” said another panelist, filmmaker Anu Valia — whose recent short film “Lucia, Before and After” premiered at the Sundance Film Festival where it won the Jury Prize for US fiction.

“Consistent encouragem­ent is 80 percent of the work for me,” she told the audience, which had both experience­d and rookie directors and writers among them.

“When you see someone like you doing what you want to do, it suddenly becomes possible,” said the writer, director, and producer, who is also part of the New York Film Festival’s Artist Academy.

“Youngsters … need to learn from their mistakes,” said the third panelist, Jasim Al-Saady, when asked for advice for young content creators.

“Be open to failures and don’t hesitate to express yourself,” said Al-Saady — a production manager and assistant director for “Hologram of the King,” “Journey to Makkah,” and “Where in the World is Osama bin Laden.”

Valia agreed, saying: “When people criticize you for your work, just take what is constructi­ve and discard the rest. Keep improving, do not let that criticism stop you from doing new things again.”

On March 1, Saudi Arabia started issuing licenses for cinema operators in the Kingdom.

Fageeh — who was the first Saudi to perform at the Gotham Theater and headline an Arabic standup comedy tour in the US and England — encouraged home-grown filmmakers to continue their work.

“When we open a cinema, we need to have a slot for local content makers, because hearing your accent, your dialect and verdict on screen is magic,” he told the audience.

The three experts openly shared their own experience­s, both traumatic and successful, before mingling freely with the audience at the end of the discussion.

“I feel very proud of our country’s progress, that our country is improving finally in our mentality,” said Ghazal Hameed, 23, who was among the audience.

 ??  ?? The Saudi Art Council, in collaborat­ion with the American Film Showcase, brought together local and internatio­nal experts on Monday to share their thoughts and opinions about what needs to be done for the Kingdom’s cinema industry. (AN photo)
The Saudi Art Council, in collaborat­ion with the American Film Showcase, brought together local and internatio­nal experts on Monday to share their thoughts and opinions about what needs to be done for the Kingdom’s cinema industry. (AN photo)

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