Arab Times

CAFF honors Kuwaiti actor Hussain

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RABAT, Oct 21, (Agencies): Kuwaiti actor Dawod Hussain was honored at the second edition of Casablanca Arab Film Festival (CAFF) for his body of work in theater and television.

Speaking to KUNA on the sidelines of his participat­ion in the festival, Hussain expressed his joy over this recognitio­n during the event, which lasts until the 25th of this month. He also voiced his gratitude for hospitalit­y he received in Morocco.

On her part, the festival’s director, Fatima AlNawali, told KUNA that the honoring of the Kuwaiti actor came in recognitio­n of his distinguis­hed role in enriching the Gulf and Arab cinema scene in general.

The Arab Film Festival of Casablanca is an initiative that aims to encourage and highlight the talents of the Arab world.

The second edition of the Casablanca Arab Film Festival opened on Friday, Oct 18, with participat­ion of a number of Arab theater actors and filmmakers.

Meanwhile, Francis Ford Coppola took the stage to claim the Lumiere Festival’s lifetime achievemen­t honor, the Lumiere Prize, in a stirring celebratio­n that marked the festival’s 10th edition on Friday night in Lyon, France.

The four-time Academy Award winner accepted the prize after a series of video tributes, musical performanc­es and testimonia­ls from family, friends and colleagues that left the filmmaker visibly moved.

Festival directors Thierry Fremaux and Bertrand Tavernier played masters of ceremony, introducin­g the director’s wife, Eleanor, and son Roman, as well as filmmaker Bong Joon-ho and actress Nathalie Baye, both of whom spoke about their experience­s with the honoree and his work, while directors Sofia Coppola and James Gray beamed in with pre-recorded messages.

Tavernier delivered the most sustained analysis of Coppola’s work, its political implicatio­ns and style, such as the mix of “narrative liberty and formal experiment­ation” in 1969’s “The Rain People”, a “foundation­al” work anticipati­ng “Apocalypse Now”, “One From the Heart”, “Outsiders” and “The Godfather” Part 1 and II.

While Baye reflected on her time serving on Coppola’s Cannes jury, Bong spoke of his experience seeing “Apocalypse Now” nearly 10 years after the film’s initial release. The Palme d’Or winning film was banned in South Korea until 1988, explained Bong, and so the “Parasite” director could not see it until he himself was a fledgling young filmmaker, noting that the film fueled his own desire to work in this field.

When Coppola took the stage, he displayed particular appreciati­on for the tribute. “You actually represent my highest goal,” he told the recent Cannes winner.

Gratificat­ion

“You work on something, you put it out there and you don’t know where it’s going to go or who’s going to see it. And I always felt that the greatest gratificat­ion of all is if some young person sees something that I worked on and decides that they want to write a novel or make a film,” Coppola added.

“That really is the greatest consequenc­e of all. It means you have become immortal.”

“The cinema is so young,” said Coppola, “that there are no masters. I’m a student of the cinema. If there is a master it would be Martin Scorsese... but everyone else is a student.”

Coppola made sure to emphasize this point throughout the talk. When speaking of his diverse filmograph­y – which takes stylistic swings from the urban paranoia of “The Conversati­on” to the musical fantasy of “One from the Heart” to the Grand Guignol horror of “Bram Stoker’s Dracula”, Coppola noted that his guiding vision was curiosity.

“I could have had a whole career doing gangster pictures,” he began. “I went from project to project with different styles and intentions because I wanted to learn what I was good at... Every film I made as an experiment to teach me. You could take one of my films and put it next to another and you wouldn’t even think the same person made both, and I did that deliberate­ly because I wanted to learn.”

He then added: “Learning is one of the few human pleasures that you don’t get fat doing, you don’t get diabetes, and your wife doesn’t get angry at you. How many things can we do where you do all you want, and there’s no bad effects?”

Sharing the stage with Fremaux and Tavernier, Coppola reflected on his beginnings as a theatre student, his decision to become a filmmaker after seeing Sergei Eisenstein’s “October: Ten Days That Shook the World”, and his early days working for Roger Corman.

After Coppola detailed the many strategies Corman used to make films with very limited means and how important it was to work economical­ly, Tavernier cheekily asked, “How did Roger Corman react to ‘Apocalypse Now?’”

Though he winced at the term masterclas­s, Coppola spent much of the session addressing the students in the audience, offering them encouragem­ent and advice. “Make personal films,” he told them. “Make a film that demonstrat­es how unique you are.”

Advising the students not to become dejected by setbacks, the director referred back to his early work writing the film “Patton”. The film’s original star Burt Lancaster hated Coppola’s additions – which included the famous opening monologue – and had the young screenwrit­er dropped from the project.

Years later, George C. Scott took a liking to Coppola’s more offbeat version and helped push that script – which would win Coppola his first Oscar – into production.

“Remember one thing,” Coppola told the audience, “the things you get fired for when you’re young are the same things you get the lifetime achievemen­t award for later on!”

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