Gulf News

UAE short film ‘Shawarma’ a touching tale

The 32-minute film chronicles the trials of a shawarma maker in a cafeteria and showcases the immigrant narrative in the UAE

- By Manjusha Radhakrish­nan, Chief Reporter

Ahome-grown short film entitled Shawarma, directed by an Abu Dhabi-based filmmaker, is making ripples online and has won two awards at the recent Kochi Internatio­nal Short Film Festival.

It explores the challenges faced by Malayali immigrants living in Khor Fakkan.

Just like how shawarmas — the popular, no-fuss Middle Eastern snack made with roasted meat shavings in pita bread — are deeply satisfying, the 32-minute film uploaded on YouTube on Saturday is equally heart-warming as it explores the themes of assimilati­on between Emiratis and expatriate­s and delves into the trials faced by migrants who come to the UAE in search of a better life. It’s a crisp tale showcasing the human spirit among immigrants and kinship between the UAE’s nationals and its foreign workers.

Directed by Jimmy Joseph, who works as an e-learning instructor in Al Ain, and produced by Ahmad Al Romaithi, Shawarma was filmed in real locations. The film, written by UAE-based journalist Sadiq Kavil, dwells on the life of Manu, a shawarma maker who is yearning to return to his home in Kerala and visit his mother or even bring her to the UAE for a visit.

Manu hasn’t been to India in the last four years and is fervently hoping that his boss and cafeteria owner (Malayalam actor Kochu Preman) and their business sponsor, played by Emirati actor Halim Qayed, would grant him leave so that he could spend time with his ageing mother. His dream is that his mother would get to taste his shawarmas.

“Anybody living in the UAE will be able to relate to our film because it touches upon issues that are real and grounded… Manu is representa­tive of all those shawarma makers in the UAE and their lives,” said Joseph in an interview with tabloid!.

Shawarma, made on a tight budget of Dh22,000 and filmed in four days in a real cafeteria near Fujairah, is the labour of love of a bunch of film enthusiast­s living in the UAE, claims the director who has no formal training in filmmaking.

While Joseph may not have a degree in movie making, he’s intent on making a career in films.

Shawarma is his third short film following Spymates (which clocked more than 200,000 views) and Valet Parking (1.4 million views on YouTube). Shawarma took more than 15 months to plan and execute.

“It’s just my unending passion for making films that led to us making the new short film Shawarma … My first two short films touched upon the lives of the upper middle class who were posh and revolved around fictional events that could happen in any metro in the world. My targeted audience in my first two short films were the middle class and upper middle class folks. And I was asked by many in the UAE as to why I did not make films about the pravasi Malaylis [Malayali expatriate­s] which were a bit more genuine and real,” said Joseph. He was advised to ditch the upper crust narratives for real stories. He obliged and served up Shawarma.

The base of Shawarma came when his friend, a journalist in a Malayalam daily, narrated an incident about a shawarma maker in the UAE and how he yearned to see his mother for several years.

Qayed, who plays the benevolent ‘arbab’ who makes Manu’s dream of seeing his mother come true, claims that he took on the role because he hated the idea of Arabs being stereotype­d in films. Apparently, when he heard that Joseph was making a short film that featured an Arab role, he volunteere­d and insisted on playing that character. The prospect of one of Joseph’s Malayali friends doing the role of the Arab felt wrong.

“I loved the story of Shawarma. It was touching and reflected today’s times. But what compelled me to be a part of this film was because I was afraid… Many filmmakers bring other nationalit­ies to play Arab characters… They look wrong, act wrong and this is what made me insist that I take on the ‘arbab’ role… Even the internatio­nal films — American and European films — show us Arabs in bad light. So I wanted this role to be done right,” said Qayed in a separate interview. The 44-year-old actor is visibly younger in Shawarma.

“My beard is usually white, but Jimmy told me to colour it black… I didn’t particular­ly like that but I found the story of Shawarma touching and I loved the simplicity of this humane story,” said Qayed.

 ??  ?? Director Jimmy Joseph with actor Halim Qayed and producer Ahmad Al Romaithi.
Director Jimmy Joseph with actor Halim Qayed and producer Ahmad Al Romaithi.
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 ?? Photos supplied ??
Photos supplied

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