The National - News

Screentime: a new cinema experience lands in Al Ain

- Faisal Salah

Bakhita Abdulla didn’t know if Al Ain would be interested in World Cinema, but she knew there had to be a place for like-minded people who love to watch movies other than Hollywood blockbuste­rs.

Frustrated at having to travel to Dubai and Abu Dhabi to watch foreign and awardwinni­ng films, the university graduate decided to curate a programme of movies to be screened in her own city. Inspired by Cinema Space in Abu Dhabi, as well as Cinema Akil in Dubai, Abdulla, after reaching out to several venues, got a positive response from Zayed Central Library, which houses an auditorium.

And that’s how Al Ain Community Cinema started. It brings a series of free film screenings to the city every fortnight.

Abdulla chose the name because she wanted to be seen as just that, a community of film lovers, coming together to share their passion.

The first movie to be screened was 2004 Japanese film Nobody Knows by award-winning director Hirokazu Kore-eda. “There were 50 or 60 people at that screening,” she says, “and they loved it.” The second event, a screening of Alfonso Cuaron’s 2006 dystopian epic Children

of Men, attracted more people. Abdulla has now curated a full programme of films that will be shown until the end of the year. “I want it to be consistent. I want it to last,” she says. Abdulla says the independen­t films being screened give cinemagoer­s other options.

“The United Arab Emirates University here in Al Ain has a film programme, but there aren’t any public spaces that screen films, where the students can go and watch the films that could enhance and inform their education.” She argues that while streaming services give people more options, the experience of watching a film with others in a cinema setting still has its merits.

“To sit somewhere dark and watch something with complete strangers, and be able to experience emotions they are feeling at the same time you are, that’s powerful and significan­t.”

To quote the Kevin Costner film, Field of Dreams, “If you build it, they will come,” and more people have been going to see the films. The Al Ain Community Cinema has six films scheduled to be screened until the end of the year, starting with Elia Suleiman’s The Time that

Remains on Saturday, October 26, and ending with the Icelandic film Rams on Saturday, December 21.

All screenings will be held at Zayed Central Library at 6pm and all are free to attend.

 ??  ?? Bakhita Abdulla started Al Ain Community Cinema for film buffs
Bakhita Abdulla started Al Ain Community Cinema for film buffs

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