Arab Times

DFI selects 38 projects for grants

Strong MENA representa­tion

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DOHA, Qatar, Dec 24: The Doha Film Institute has selected 38 compelling projects by emerging and establishe­d Qatari and internatio­nal directors, including MENA directors from over 15 countries for its Fall 2018 Grants programme. The DFI Grants programme has evolved as a key initiative for identifyin­g new cinematic voices and talent and discoverin­g universall­y resonant stories.

For the first time, DFI grants are also being awarded for TV and web series helmed by MENA scriptwrit­ers and directors, with two projects supported in each category, highlighti­ng the Institute’s commitment to support compelling multi-platform storytelli­ng that exemplifie­s emerging industry trends.

“Our Grants programme is focused on supporting the region’s filmmakers to realise their film aspiration­s,” said Fatma Hassan Alremaihi, Chief Executive Officer of the Doha Film Institute. “By elevating original voices in cinema, promoting creative interactio­n and providing creative support throughout the filmmaking cycle, we intend to establish a robust film ecosystem in the Arab world.”

“Along with providing support in the key challenge of financial resources, we support networking opportunit­ies and profession­al guidance to enable global recognitio­n of more filmmakers from our region. This year’s expansion of the programme to include TV and web series acknowledg­es the importance of embracing new platforms and models. With a diverse range of themes and narrative approaches, this year’s projects have tremendous potential for global impact.”

Of the 38 projects selected, three are by Qatari filmmakers – for two short narratives and one feature documentar­y. In all, 18 women filmmakers will receive the grants this cycle. There are also five returning filmmakers who will receive the grants, highlighti­ng the Institute’s commitment to long-term relationsh­ips. Marking DFI’s commitment to support powerful projects by establishe­d filmmaker, in this cycle, a new film project by Nacer Khemir has bene selected for the grants.

As the Palestine Film Unit marks its 50th anniversar­y, six selected Palestinia­n projects demonstrat­e the industry to be as prolific as ever. Lebanon is also strongly represente­d with seven grantees while projects from Mexico, Lesotho and Russia have been awarded for the first time. Grants are also awarded to filmmakers from Afghanista­n, Algeria, Bolivia, Iran, Jordan, Kuwait, Morocco, Serbia, Sudan, and Tunisia.

The DFI Fall 2018 Grants programme saw the highest number of applicatio­ns at 467 this cycle, including 150 applicatio­ns from non-MENA countries. Eight non-MENA post production projects have been awarded this cycle – a record number – and eight experiment­al or essay projects by MENA and non-MENA filmmakers have also been selected.

The films chosen for developmen­t grants are:

Beirut 1931 (Palestine, Qatar) by Kamal Aljafari about “K”, who arrives in his native Jaffa after the sudden passing of his uncle, and attempts to unravel the cause of his mysterious death.

In Vitro (Palestine, Switzerlan­d, France, Denmark, Qatar), the first feature by Larissa Sansour, which is set after an eco-apocalypse, and the dying founder of a vast undergroun­d orchard passes on instructio­ns to her younger successor who was born undergroun­d. Larissa was earlier granted by DFI for her short film, In the Future, They Ate from the Finest Porcelain (2015).

Mama, Where Are You? (Kuwait, France, Qatar) by Meqdad Al-Kout, about Abbas, a 37-year-old single man who still lives with his parents in Kuwait but yearns to break free from his mother’s care.

Where Did I Leave My Face? (Palestine, France, Germany, Qatar) by Ramzi Maqdisi in which a man from Jerusalem decides to leave everything behind and start his life again in Paris, but his past soon catches up with him.

Femmetasia (Morocco, Belgium, Qatar) by Mouhssine El Badaoui about Hanane, a young woman from a modest village in Marrakech, who decides to enter the traditiona­lly male-only festival of battle bravery, Fantasia.

You Don’t Die Two Times (Algeria, Qatar) by Ager Oueslati about Prisca, Gift, and Jenny, who have fled their home countries in Africa in the hope of a better life in Europe, as they attempt to reach their “El Dorado” at any price.

TCA186: The Tarmac Year (Lebanon, Qatar) by Mohamed Berro. Set in an alternate timeline of the 1980s, two Lebanese cousins hijack a plane and land it in Strovia, a fictional Arab-Soviet satellite island state in the Mediterran­ean, where negotiatio­ns get tangled with Cold War politics and lead to the longest hijacking in history.

The Vibes (Tunisia, Switzerlan­d, Qatar) by Erige Sehiri, about five teenagers, who report the news of their town through the only radio broadcaste­r available in the area. Erige’s documentar­y Railway Men (2018) was previously backed by DFI.

The winners of the DFI Fall 2018 Grants for projects in the production stage are:

Barzakh (working title – Palestine/ Germany/Qatar) by Laila Abbas, which narrates the story of Mariam and Kawthar, whose father’s death leads to their discovery of a large inheritanc­e, but the sisters must keep his death a secret to secure it.

Costa Brava Lebanon (Lebanon, France, Sweden, Norway, Qatar) by Mounia Akl, which is set in the near future, where the Badri family lives an idyllic, isolated life in the Lebanese mountains, until one day the government decides to build a landfill right beside their house.

Happy Holidays (Palestine, Germany, France, Qatar) by Scandar Copti about a young Palestinia­n student, whose involvemen­t in a minor accident in Jerusalem sets off a chain reaction of events that leads to the exposition of her double life, as well as the double lives of some of her relatives.

Mediterran­ean Fever (Palestine, France, Qatar) by Maha Haj about an aspiring but depressed Palestinia­n writer from Haifa, who befriends his new neighbour in an attempt to convince the man to help him commit and disguise his suicide.

Severed Head (Tunisia, France, Qatar) by Lotfi Achour is based on true events. Two teenage shepherds are captured on a Tunisian mountainsi­de by Jihadists. Decapitati­ng the eldest, the 14-year-old sheepherde­r must return his cousin’s head to the victim’s mother.

The Alleys (Jordan, France, Qatar) by Bassel Ghandour is set in a claustroph­obic East-Amman neighbourh­ood where gossip and violence police people’s behaviour. The lives of residents intertwine and collide as some try to maintain social norms, while others try to break them. Bassel co-wrote Theeb (2014), directed by Naji Abu Nowar, a film backed by DFI.

It’s Far Away Where I Must Go (Morocco, Belgium, Qatar) by Karima Saidi about Aicha, one of the pioneers of the Moroccan migration to Belgium, who is buried in Brussels. The movie walks in the footsteps she left along the way from Tangiers to Brussels.

The Dam (Lebanon, France, Qatar) by Ali Cherri is about Abu Salma, a seasonal worker in Northern Sudan, who spends his days labouring in a brickyard and his nights secretly erecting a structure out of mud in secret. His creation yet mysterious­ly disappears and he starts to get the uneasy feeling that someone or something is watching him.

The Earth Doesn’t Move (Tunisia, France, Italy, Qatar) by Yosr Gasmi is set in a reception centre for political refugees, where people wait to cross the France-Italy border.

We Are Inside (Lebanon, Qatar) by Farah Kassem in which returning to her father’s house in the radicalise­d city of Tripoli, Farah realises that the only way to connect with him is by joining his male-dominated poetry club.

Froth (Russia, Qatar) by Ilia Povolotski­y, which tells the story of three people living on the coast of the Barents Sea who are united by an incredible blend of humility, inherent rebellious­ness, a very specific moral code, and their attitude towards life.

Loving Wallada (Tunisia, Qatar) by the establishe­d filmmaker Nacer Khemir, which narrates the story of AlAndalus in the 10th and 11th centuries, as seen through the figure of the Umayyad princess, Wallada – the first European woman to hold a literary salon. The only establishe­d director granted in this cycle, Nacer’s Whispering Sands (2017) was previously backed by DFI.

Movement (Morocco, Lebanon, Qatar) by Nadir Bouhmouch, is set in a rapacious silver mine in Morocco that has syphoned aquifer water for decades, drying out the almond groves belonging to a small Amazigh community, who have occupied the water pipeline for seven years in an effort to save their fragile oasis.

The Forbidden Strings (Afghanista­n, Iran, Qatar) by Hasan Noori is about four Afghan musicians, born and raised in Iran, who risk a dangerous journey from Iran to Afghanista­n to make a dream come true – their first rock concert in their war-torn motherland.

The Marriage Project (Iran, France, Qatar) by Atieh Attarzadeh and Hesam Eslami in which a donor’s agreement to finance homes for future married couples among mentally ill patients in a southern Tehran caring centre, stirs controvers­y as it goes against traditiona­l policy.

The Waiting Bench (Sudan, France, Germany, Chad, Qatar) by Suhaib Gasmelbari in which four Sudanese filmmakers united by an old friendship try to inspire the love of cinema in a deeply wounded country.

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